زهرة الملح
zahrat al-milh
2012
Guérande AOP
French protected designation granted
1 g/m²
daily yield
per salt pan in peak season
<5%
moisture
naturally damp crystals
98%
NaCl
plus trace minerals from the bay
Fleur de sel is the thin crystalline film that forms on the surface of concentrated brine in a salt marsh on still, warm, dry afternoons, skimmed by hand with a long flat wooden rake called a lousse before it sinks and becomes common coarse salt. Because it crystallises at the air-water interface rather than on the clay floor of the pan, fleur de sel stays white, brittle and hollow, carrying trapped air and minute quantities of magnesium chloride, calcium sulphate and potassium from the concentrated seawater. Sodium chloride content sits around 88 percent, against 98 to 99 percent for refined table salt, and the remaining fraction of trace minerals is what gives the crystal its faintly sweet, almost violet-like aroma and its slow dissolution on the tongue. The reference origins are the marshes of Guerande in Loire-Atlantique, whose Mer des Pertuis salt received French IGP protection in 2012, the Ile de Re marshes off La Rochelle, and the Noirmoutier pans further south, all worked since the early Middle Ages by the salt workers known as paludiers. A parallel Portuguese tradition runs through the Algarve, particularly Castro Marim and Tavira, where flor de sal is harvested by the same principles on slightly warmer pans. Fleur de sel is a finishing salt, not a cooking salt: once dissolved in stock or water it surrenders the texture and delicate minerality that justify its price. Its proper home is on caramels, butter, tomatoes, grilled steak, radishes, foie gras and dark chocolate, added at the last possible moment.
Guerande (Loire-Atlantique), Ile de Re, Noirmoutier, Mer des Pertuis; Algarve (Portugal), FR.
IGP since 2012.
FR
Guerande (Loire-Atlantique), Ile de Re, Noirmoutier, Mer des Pertuis; Algarve (Portugal) · Guérande, Loire-Atlantique (France)
Paludiers repair clay walls and flood the marsh system -- seawater enters through a single gate and starts its six-week journey.
Water passes through vasières, cobiers, fares, adernes -- each stage more concentrated. By the last basin (the oeillet) it is saturated brine.
On still, hot afternoons with east wind, a white film blooms on the oeillet surface -- the paludier skims it with a long wooden rake (lousse).
Crystals are piled on wooden planks beside the pan, drained under sun and wind for 24–48 h -- never heated, never washed.
Since 2012, every batch is tested for origin, moisture, and purity by INAO before it can carry the Guérande AOP seal.
Keep dry-ish in its box, pinch between thumb and index on a hot steak or fresh tomato. Never cook it -- heat destroys the crunch that is the whole point.
The molecules that make it taste like Kampot — and not like anything else.
ICP analysis of Guérande fleur de sel: the magnesium, calcium and potassium traces deliver the characteristic bitter-sweet mineral finish that supermarket iodised salt simply cannot match.
98%
Sodium chloride
pure crystal core
0.5%
Magnesium
mineral bitterness lift
0.2%
Calcium
structural bite
4.5%
Moisture
unbaked, natural damp
The salt itself -- clean, bright, immediate.
Dry-bitter lift, the 'mineral' note
Chalky structure, softens the NaCl edge.
Slight metallic sweetness.
Marine whisper, the taste of the bay.
| Pepper | Sodium Chloride | Oil |
|---|---|---|
★ Fleur de Sel Guérande Atlantic hand-raked · AOP since 2012 | 98% | 4.5% |
Fleur de Sel Camargue Mediterranean · softer, warmer | 97% | 5% |
Maldon Essex pyramid · bone-dry, pure | 99.5% | 0.3% |
Table salt Refined, iodised · flat, sharp | 99.9% | 0% |
How the world cooks with it.
3 signature dishes
Fleur de sel is the French finishing salt -- a pinch on steak frites, on fresh radishes with butter, on the rim of a caramel.
Pinched on the rested steak just before the first cut.
Fresh radishes, salted butter, one pinch per radish.
Breton salted butter caramel -- fleur de sel folded in at the end.
What it's called, from Phnom Penh to Palermo.
زهرة الملح
zahrat al-milh
盐之花
yan zhi hua
Fleur de sel
Fleur de sel
Fleur de Sel
फ्लेर डी सेल
fleur di sel
Fiore di sale
フルール・ド・セル
furuuru do seru
Flor de sal
Flor de sal
Protein
Plant
Sweet
It is the thin crust of salt crystals that forms on the surface of saturated brine in shallow salt pans on still, hot, windy afternoons. Harvesters (paludiers) skim it by hand with a long wooden rake before it sinks. Sel gris is what they scrape from the bottom -- fleur de sel is the delicate white top layer only.