Rosemary Sea Salt Pretzel Recipe (2024)

By Maria Lichty

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Rosemary Sea Salt Pretzel Recipe (2)

Happy National Pretzel Day! Yes, there is a special day dedicated to pretzels. I am A-Ok with that because I love pretzels. I’ve always been a fan. In grade school, I always brought a brown bag lunch to school. I always asked my dad for a peanut butter, banana, & honey sandwich, an apple, and pretzel sticks…and of course a cookie for dessert:) I love salty pretzels in any shape or form. My new favorite pretzels are these homemade soft Rosemary Sea Salt Pretzels. They are fantastic!

Rosemary Sea Salt Pretzel Recipe (3)

Josh is the pretzel master at our house. He always makes them and I eat them. It’s a rough job but somebody has to do it:) This time he added fresh rosemary and sea salt to the dough. The combination is awesome! They are good plain, but he made a rosemary cheese sauce that knocked my socks off. I loved dunking my pretzel into the cheese sauce.

Rosemary Sea Salt Pretzel Recipe (4)

The pretzels are really easy to make. I promise. Don’t let the yeast and twisting the dough scare you. They are fun to make and eat! Celebrate National Pretzel Day with these Rosemary Sea Salt Pretzels. They make a great snack!

Here are a few other pretzel recipes to help you celebrate National Pretzel Day! Enjoy!

  • Biscoff Pretzel Bites with White Chocolate
  • Homemade Soft Pretzel Bites
  • Chocolate Chip Cookie Pretzel Bars
  • Pizza Pretzel Bites

Rosemary Sea Salt Pretzel Recipe (5)

Rosemary Sea Salt Pretzel Recipe (6)

Vegetarian

Rosemary Sea Salt Pretzels with Rosemary Cheddar Cheese Sauce

Soft homemade pretzels with fresh rosemary and sea salt. Dip them into a rosemary cheese sauce for a great snack!

4.50 from 6 votes

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Servings 8 large soft pretzels

Ingredients

For the pretzels:

For the Rosemary Cheese Sauce:

Instructions

  • To make the pretzels: combine the water, sugar, yeast, and butter in the bowl of a stand mixer and mix with the dough hook until combined. Let sit for 5 minutes.

  • Add the salt, flour, and rosemary to the mixture and mix on low speed until combined. Increase the speed to medium and continue kneading until the dough is smooth and begins to pull away from the side of the bowl, about 3 to 4 minutes. If the dough appears too wet, add additional flour, 1 tablespoon at a time. Remove the dough from the bowl, place on a flat surface and knead into a ball with your hands.

  • Coat a large bowl with canola oil, add the dough and turn to coat with the oil. Cover with a clean towel or plastic wrap and place in a warm spot until the dough doubles in size. This will take about 1 hour.

  • Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F. Bring the water to a boil in a large pot.

  • Remove the dough from the bowl and place on a flat surface. Divide the dough into 8 equal pieces. Roll each piece into a long rope. To shape into pretzels, take the right side and cross over to the left. Cross right to left again and flip up. Slowly add the baking soda to the boiling water. Boil the pretzels in the water solution, 2 at a time for 30 seconds, splashing the tops with the warmed water using a spoon. Remove with a large flat slotted spatula or a spider. Place 4 pretzels on each baking sheet, brush the tops with the egg wash and season liberally with sea salt. Bake for 15 to 18 minutes or until pretzels are golden brown.

  • Remove pretzels from oven and let cool on a wire baking rack.

  • To make the Rosemary Cheese Sauce: In a medium saucepan over medium heat, melt butter and whisk in flour. Pour in the milk and whisk until the mixture thickens. Stir in shredded cheese, stir until cheese is melted and smooth. Stir in fresh rosemary and season with salt and pepper, to taste. Serve with pretzels.

Have you tried this recipe?

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Home » Recipes » Appetizer

Rosemary Sea Salt Pretzel Recipe (7)

Maria

I'm Maria and my husband is Josh. We share a love of cooking, baking, and entertaining. We enjoy creating recipes that are simple, fresh, and family friendly. We love sitting around the table with good food, good conversation, and good friends and family! Our kitchen is always open!
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  1. I just tried these a couple days ago and they were divine! Thanks for sharing this recipe. But I have a big question: When I took the pretzels out from the pot of water with a slotted spoon, they were pretty wet and then stuck to the wax paper. I thought it’d be OK because it is wax paper after all, but when they were done baking, all the pretzels stuck like glue to the paper. Any suggestions? Should I have sprayed the wax paper with nonstick spray?

    Thanks!

    Reply

    1. Wax paper normally isn’t used to bake on, shouldn’t you have used parchment paper? Maybe that’s why you had this issue

  2. Good day! These looks good! Let me ask you, how many grams in your cup, which you measured out the ingredients?

    Reply

  3. These were fantastic!

    Reply

  4. If I don’t have a stand mixer but I have a hand mixer and a food processor would it still be best to hand work the dough or should I use one of the aforementioned mixers instead? Thanks!

    Reply

  5. Why all the comments on Wanting or Wishing you could make or eat these. Some of us really do cook would like to see comments by who actually made these and get tips and comments on how it came out. I hate sifting through 4 pages of blathering oohs and ahhs when you haven’t even tried to make it. Of course they look good, but hold of on typing about it until you’ve tried making it. This is a recipe blog, which implies you want to make things.

    Reply

  6. Every time I come on this blog, I always find very inspiring recipes and as usual, stunning pictures! I have to try those pretzels at home!!

    Reply

  7. Hi 🙂 I’m looking forward to bringing these to a Super Bowl party. I have a couple questions though:

    1) Can I make the pretzels a day ahead? I work the morning of the Super Bowl, so I would be looking to make the pretzels the day before. Would they harden?
    2) Can the cheese sauce be re-heated? (in the microwave for instance)

    Thanks 🙂

    Reply

  8. Made these on a rare Snow Day in Georgia. They were fabulous! I used two different pans, one non – stick by farberware. They stuck to the regular pan, but lifted easily from the non stick. I will definitely make these again!

    Reply

  9. Is it possible to make these with White Whole Wheat Flour?? We are trying to cut out white flour from our diets and I just wasn’t sure if you would get the same texture. These look delicious and I would love to make them!

    Reply

  10. Maria, I made these today for the Super Bowl, and we are enjoying them right now, while watching the game. They are soft, warm and wonderful and taste like Heaven . The rosemary is a perfect flavor match, and I found 4 and 1/2 C of flour to be perfect. Thanks for this wonderful recipe!!

    Reply

  11. I read this recipe and thought surely that 3 quarts of water is wrong and it definitely is. No one has a mixing bowl that’s a gallon big. I tried it anyway and yep, it failed. Post the right measurements please.

    Reply

    1. It’s not meant for use in the pretzel; it’s the amount of water you boil the pretzels in. 3 qts. is exactly the correct amount with the baking soda.

  12. This is a fantastic recipe! I could eat these pretzels all day.
    I would definitely recommend this to anyone!

    Reply

  13. I use this recipe for pretzels because it’s the BEST. However today the mister cooked up a corned beef and I decided to bake your pretzel dough into slider buns…holy moly are they fabulous with brown mustard, pepper jack and corned beef!!! GREAT recipe and totally easy to make. Thank you so much for sharing it.

    Reply

  14. Just made these and they are delicious! I was a little intimidated by the directions but they turned out pretty good! Better as pretzel bites because mine didn’t look like pretzels lol

    Reply

  15. This recipe looks amazing. I’m throwing my husband a birthday party and would like these on the menu. I’ve seen some recipes that freeze after the dough boils, before the baking step. Have you tried this? Or any other freezing methods with soft pretzels? I’d love to have all of the dishes prepared ahead of time. Thanks!

    Reply

  16. Did you give any thoughts on making a you tube video on: How to make a pretzel?
    I never made any and being a visual person, I would like to see in how much water
    I go before I do wet my feet!
    Your picture is totally delicious…thanks in advance, Carole 🙂

    Reply

    1. We haven’t done any videos, but we will think about it! Thanks for the feedback!

  17. Made pretzels often but I never used rosemary, I am intrigued. I too liked the half-time show, for it highlighted important things for us in this country. I was pleasantly surprised as one that does art much more than football. Thanks

    Reply

  18. Did you need to grease the pans at all? I made some in the oven, but they stuck pretty bad to the pan. Still tasted good. I made a few on the grill without any problem though.

    Reply

  19. These look so amazing! Do you think that it would be ok to do up a very large batch (for a party) of dough, boil them and then freeze to be put in the oven later, as they’re needed? I’d rather serve them fresh and warm over the course of the party but not sure if the dough will do ok being boiled, frozen, and then baked later (like a day or two later). Thanks!

    Reply

    1. Yes, you can freeze the pretzels and reheat them in the oven. Enjoy!

  20. I’ve made these several times before – they’re delicious! I’m planning to bring them to a family Christmas party on Monday, but I don’t want to leave all the prep work for Christmas Day. Do you have experience with making the dough in advance? If so, I’d love a recommendation on how to do this withoug ruining these delicious pretzles! I’m hoping to do all the work up to the boil and bake part in advance. Will that work? Thanks so much 🙂

    Reply

    1. I haven’t tried it, but I bet you could keep the dough in the fridge until you are ready to roll them out and boil.

  21. Looking for the pizza pretzel, can’t seem to locate it, thanks much

    Reply

  22. Rosemary Sea Salt Pretzel Recipe (14)
    too doughy

    Reply

  23. I’ve always loved shake shack’s cheese sauce for dipping crinkle cut fries and it dawned on me today….”that flavor’s rosemary!”

    After doing a search your recipe is the only site mentioning the mixing of this herb with cheddar. You two are forward thinking creative powerhouses!

    Reply

  24. Rosemary Sea Salt Pretzel Recipe (15)
    Flavor seemed great, baking time/temp didn’t work for me. Followed exactly and they browned nicely, and were done baking, but were too dense and didn’t crisp up on the outside. Might try lower temp and longer bake time to get the nice crisp outside that I really wanted!

    Reply

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Rosemary Sea Salt Pretzel Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is Auntie Anne's secret solution? ›

The dough's secret ingredient is probably sugar

The mystery ingredient is still a top VIP secret of the company but founder Anne Beiler told The Washington Post in 2008 that her husband Jonas was the one who added the magic-making ingredient to the dough.

What are the ingredients in pretzel salt? ›

Pretzel I and Pretzel M Salts Pretzel I and Pretzel M salts are food grade, compacted, white crystalline, sodium chloride manufactured under stringent process control procedures. They contain no anti-caking or free-flowing additives or conditioners.

What is the best salt to use for pretzels? ›

Ideally, you would use pretzel salt when making pretzels. But this type of salt is not always easy to find in the store. That's why many people turn to kosher salt instead.

How do you get salt to stick to pretzel bites? ›

Lightly spray (mist) the tops of the pretzels with cool water from a distance of at least at least 18”. You don't want to soak the skin, just moisten it. LIGHTLY Sprinkle the Pretzel Salt provided to have a small amount on each pretzel. You can re-use any salt that falls off onto the sheetpan after your baking process.

What is the secret ingredient which makes a pretzel taste like a pretzel? ›

Pretzels are dipped in food-grade lye before baking. It gives them a characteristic shine and flavor.

Does Auntie Anne's use lye or baking soda? ›

Well, the cheery ladies were very clear with me: they do NOT use lye. No sodium hydroxide/poison/caustic soda—none whatsoever—in their pretzels. (They do, however, dip their pretzels in a baking soda solution.)

Why does pretzel salt taste different? ›

Pretzel Salt

It is a coarse-grained salt that adds a distinct flavor and texture to pretzels, making them savory and delicious. Pretzel salt is typically made up of larger salt crystals, which adhere well to the surface of the dough and provide a satisfying crunch when bitten into.

What is special about pretzel salt? ›

An intensely white and clean salt that provides visual and textural appeal to soft pretzels, breadsticks and other topical applications as well as seasonings and rubs.

Why does pretzel salt taste better? ›

Because pretzel salt has larger crystals, it dissolves slower when you eat it. How fast the salt takes to dissolve changes its flavor.

Is sea salt good on pretzels? ›

Brush the pretzels with egg wash (1 egg yolk and 1 tbsp water) and sprinkle with flaky sea salt. Bake in oven until browned, about 8-10 minutes then enjoy baked sea salt pretzels with mustard or your favorite dipping sauce!

What are pretzels without salt called? ›

Pretzel Facts

Pretzels without salt are called baldies.

Is there a difference between sea salt and kosher salt? ›

Size: Kosher salt is large, and because it's industrially processed, it's more uniform in size. Sea salt crystals can be fine, flaky, chunky or coarse. Appearance: Kosher salt crystals are coarse and pebble-shaped, whereas sea salt is more delicate and crystals can take on a flaky or pyramid-like shape.

Can pretzel dough sit overnight? ›

Choose a bowl that will be large enough to contain the dough after it has doubled in size, and grease it lightly with butter. Transfer the dough to the greased bowl and cover the bowl tightly with plastic wrap. Put the dough in the refrigerator to rise for at least 8 hours, and up to 24 hours, for optimal flavor.

Why do you dip pretzels in water? ›

The answer lies in a brief dip in an alkaline water bath before baking. This bath essentially gelatinizes the outside of the pretzel, preventing it from fully “springing” during baking (as bread does) and giving pretzels their signature chewy crust.

Why do you dip pretzels in baking soda? ›

Furthermore, we've introduced the baking soda bath. While it sounds strange, this step is what gives pretzels that iconic flavor, chewy texture, helps deepen their golden color in the oven, and locks in the super soft interior.

What makes Auntie Anne's so good? ›

Auntie Anne Pretzels are somehow more delicious than your average pretzel. A healthy dose of sugar makes for a tasty dough, and a topping of melted butter and salt makes them positively addictive. Another reason the popular pretzels are so good is they are made and served fresh and warm.

What does the baking soda solution do for the pretzels? ›

Like lye, baking soda is an alkaline substance, and when mixed with water and brushed over the pretzel dough, it changes the pH of the dough and gelates the surface starch. In the oven, the starch gel hardens and the alkaline baking soda makes browning happen fast.

What does dipping a pretzel in an alkali solution do? ›

An alkaline solution with a high pH will increase the surface browning and flavor contrast. During the bath exposure, natural sugars caramelize and the starch gelatinizes, creating the characteristic brown color and gloss in the finished product.

What does Auntie Anne's dip their pretzels in? ›

Choices include Cheese, Hot Salsa Cheese, Sweet Glaze, Caramel, Honey Mustard, Marinara, and Light Cream Cheese.

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