Anyone can make Popcorn Salt. It makes for such a fun gift. It’s easy to make this popcorn salt recipe in virtually any flavor! Perfect for your favorite dishes and especially perfect for fun popcorn!
This post may include affiliate links that earn us a small commission from your purchases at no extra cost to you.
Why We Love This Popcorn Salt Recipe
This recipe is so simple that I just had to give you a few different flavor options. Some savory, some sweet, but all delicious!
- Bacon Parmesan: A combination of iodized salt, cooked bacon bits, and grated Parmesan cheese makes this savory, umami flavor pop.
- Buffalo Ranch: Buffalo sauce (store-bought or homemade!), ranch seasoning, and kosher salt make the perfect game-day pairing.
- Chocolate Wine: Chocolate wine and sea salt seems like a strange combination but is so good with dessert. I used ChocoVine brand chocolate wine, but any kind will do.
Variations on Salted Popcorn
Once you get the method down, there’s no limit to the flavors of popcorn salt you can make. Mushrooms, Italian seasoning, nutritional yeast, everything bagel seasoning, cinnamon sugar… let your imagination run wild!
Email This Recipe
Enter your email and we’ll send the recipe directly to you!
How to Store
Store leftover popcorn salt in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 2 weeks or in the refrigerator for up to 2 months.
Serving Suggestions
You don’t just need to stick to popcorn with this; why not use these sassy salts to jazz up dinnertime? I love to use them to marinate meats such as chicken, pork, and beef.
The buffalo popcorn salt would be perfect for savory Mexican dishes such as fajitas, enchiladas, and salsas.
Why not use the bacon salt to flavor your next batch of mac and cheese, and the chocolate salt would be the perfect way to flavor desserts!
Popcorn salt tends to be much finer than regular salt (and includes flavoring), hence why we blitz it in the food processor.
You can pretty much use any salt to make your own popcorn salt but I prefer to go for finer sea salt or sea salt flakes. Extra fine sea salt will give you a finer texture and flakes will be slightly rougher and chunkier.
To make your salt even finer, grind it in the food processor for at least 10 seconds.
More Popcorn Recipes To Try
How to Make Popcorn Salts Step by Step
Bacon Parmesan Salt
Pulse the Salt: Put 1 cup of iodized salt, ¼ cup of cooked bacon crumbles, and ¼ cup of freshly grated Parmesan cheese in a food processor and pulse until fully combined.
Buffalo Salt
Pulse the Salt: Preheat your oven to 170°F (or the lowest setting on your oven). Place 2 tablespoons of Buffalo Sauce, 1 tablespoon of ranch seasoning, and 1 cup of`kosher salt in a food processor and pulse until combined.
Bake the Salt: Spread the salt on a parchment-lined baking sheet and bake for 2 hours. Every 30 minutes, flip the salt to make sure it doesn’t burn or meld together.
Break Up the Salt: Put the salt back into food processor and pulse once more. The salt should break up and form a finer consistency. Enjoy!
Chocolate Wine Salt
Cook the Syrup: Preheat your oven to 170°F or your oven’s lowest heat setting. Pour 750 milliliters (1 bottle) of chocolate wine into a medium saucepan and simmer on low heat until it reduces significantly and becomes a syrup. This might take 45 minutes to an hour. Take off of heat.
Bake and Pulse: Place 1 cup of sea salt and the wine reduction in food processor and pulse until well combined. This mixture will be relatively sticky. Spread the mixture on a parchment-lined baking sheet and chop up as much as possible to spread the salt up. Bake for 2 hours, flipping and chopping it every 30 minutes. Once dried out, return the salt to a food processor and pulse. The salt should break up and form a thinner/more salt-like consistency.
This does sound like a great idea for some gifts–maybe wedding favors! Thanks for the inspiration! I do hope nobody actually turns on their oven before the reduce the wine for an hour though????
I have just returned from Iceland where I brought home a sample of licorice salt. It is supposed to be great on popcorn, steak, and some veggies too! Since I have written a children’s vegetable cookbook I am interested in making this salt. I wondered before I start experimenting if you had any knowledge or tips that might help me? I appreciate your time and good luck with your passions!
Heide from 4waystoyummy
Licorice salt, what a fun idea! OMG I’d love to visit Iceland, that’s amazing!
Glad you like the idea. Do you have any ideas of how to make it. Pulverize some good black licorice and add to the salt? Could it be that simple?
Just wondering if you can use a dehydrator instead of the oven…
I’m sure this is possible but I’ve never actually used a dehydrator so I don’t know for sure the method. If you try it please let me know!
how much does each recipe yeild? I’m planning on doing these for christmas gifts this year.
This is great! I use finishing salts from The Salt Cellar (salt-cellar.com) because making them myself isn’t always doable. This inspires me to be more of a DIY person. I’m going to have to try the chocolate wine – I’ve never seen that flavor before!
This is great! I use finishing salts from The Salt Cellar (https://www.salt-cellar.com) because making them myself isn’t always doable. This inspires me to be more of a DIY person. Have you ever tried making these with Himalayan salt rather than iodized or sea salt?
Do you know how long these will last? I want to make them as gifts, but hate to give something that will “expire” soon.
What’s the storage time of the last two? I imagine longer than the two weeks.
Wow! I love the flavour combinations you’ve made. They all sound great. Glad I could provide some inspiration. Ax
This is suchhhh a great homemade gift idea! Or just a make our movie nights in better idea :) haha
It’s so fun Ashley! I can’t wait to come up with more flavors now that I know how easy it is. Hope you’re doing well! I want to meet up at a conference one of these days!