Summer is here, and if you’re growing tomatoes, zucchini, or anything else in the garden right now, I have a three-step trick that will change how you finish every single dish.
Flaky salt is already a gamechanger, but when you add lemon zest, it becomes something else entirely. It takes 30 seconds to make and lasts for weeks. And once you have a jar of it on your counter, I promise you will reach for it constantly.
I grew up in Winnipeg, where lemons don’t grow and winter lasts six months. Then I married into a passionate Italian-Canadian family who cooked as though everything mattered, and in their kitchen, lemons were always present. Always purposeful. Never an afterthought. That Italian instinct for the lemon changed the way I cook forever. This recipe is one of the simplest expressions of it.

Zest one medium lemon directly into the bowl. Mix well, so the salt and zest get to know each other properly.


Spread the mixture out on a plate and let it dry for five to ten minutes.
That’s it. You’re done.
The obvious place to start is fresh garden tomatoes. Sprinkle this over a thick slice of a summer tomato and you will never eat a tomato plain again. The lemon cuts through the sweetness, the salt draws out the juice, and the whole thing tastes like it came from a restaurant kitchen.
But this is where I want you to think bigger, because in my kitchen this jar gets used on almost everything:
Scatter it over the fish the moment it comes off the heat. The residual warmth releases the lemon oil and the whole kitchen smells incredible.
A pinch on top just before you eat them. It sounds too simple to matter. It is not too simple to matter.
This has become a non-negotiable in my house. Avocado, good bread, lemon zest salt, done.
Rub a little butter into the corn while it’s hot, then dust with the lemon salt. People will ask you what you did to it.
The baked potato trick is one of my favourites: rub a potato in olive oil, coat the outside with the lemon salt, bake for 55 minutes. The skin comes out crispy, golden, and fragrant. Everyone at the table fights over the part they’d normally leave behind.
And my personal favourite, which I will not apologise for: on the rim of a margarita glass. The Italian family who taught me to love lemons would probably have something to say about that. But it works beautifully.
Add 1/2 teaspoon of dried herbs alongside the zest. Rosemary and thyme work beautifully, as does crushed fennel seed if you’re feeling adventurous. Keep the herb quantity roughly half the amount of salt so the flavours stay subtle and combined, rather than one thing shouting over another.

I keep a jar of the plain version and a jar of the rosemary version on my counter at all times. Once you start, you will understand why.
Simple things, done well. That is the whole La Limone philosophy.
What kind of salt do you use? Do you prefer complicated recipes or simple ones? What do you use lemons for in your house?
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