




Somethin' to Finish With - Garlic & Rosemary Finishing Salt
Somethin' to Finish With â Garlic & Rosemary Finishing Salt
This is the last step that makes food taste finished. Somethinâ to Finish With â Garlic & Rosemary is a kosher flake finishing salt built for the moment your dish comes off the heat. The flakes dissolve fast, season evenly, and leave just enough crunch to register in every bite. Garlic brings warmth and depth, rosemary brings that piney, savory edge, and the result is clean, direct, and kitchen-staple useful. Use it where youâd normally reach for salt at the table, but want more payoff. Itâs especially good on carved steak and lamb, roasted chicken, crispy potatoes, focaccia, pasta, and hearty vegetables. If you grill or smoke, keep it on the cutting board and hit sliced meat right before serving. You get better control than seasoning early, and you donât lose the aromatics to the fire.
This oneâs for cooks who like real flavor without extra steps. Itâs not a rub and itâs not meant for the pan. Think of it as your âmake it taste like a restaurantâ move, whether youâre plating weeknight chicken thighs, finishing roasted broccoli, or dressing up a simple bowl of buttered noodles.
Original: $10.00
-70%$10.00
$3.00Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Somethin' to Finish With â Garlic & Rosemary Finishing Salt
This is the last step that makes food taste finished. Somethinâ to Finish With â Garlic & Rosemary is a kosher flake finishing salt built for the moment your dish comes off the heat. The flakes dissolve fast, season evenly, and leave just enough crunch to register in every bite. Garlic brings warmth and depth, rosemary brings that piney, savory edge, and the result is clean, direct, and kitchen-staple useful. Use it where youâd normally reach for salt at the table, but want more payoff. Itâs especially good on carved steak and lamb, roasted chicken, crispy potatoes, focaccia, pasta, and hearty vegetables. If you grill or smoke, keep it on the cutting board and hit sliced meat right before serving. You get better control than seasoning early, and you donât lose the aromatics to the fire.
This oneâs for cooks who like real flavor without extra steps. Itâs not a rub and itâs not meant for the pan. Think of it as your âmake it taste like a restaurantâ move, whether youâre plating weeknight chicken thighs, finishing roasted broccoli, or dressing up a simple bowl of buttered noodles.




















