What I put on my fish & chips: Salt. Also that produced since 1794 by Sarsons.
Should I put Spiritual Vinegar on my chest, OP…?! [/Doug Piranha-levels of sarcasm]
…oh, and at the bottom of that very long page there’s this disclaimer:
This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. All materials on this site are provided for informational and entertainment purposes only and are NOT medical advice, and NOT intended in any way as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.
The website's content and the product for sale is based upon the author's opinion
>All materials on this site are provided for informational and entertainment purposes
Which means that everything you say is lies, which therefore destroys your own opinions, OP.
…but fish & chips - among other foods - are heavenly with salt & vinegar on such, sure.
Because that’s a provable fact.
So why is it that the likes of Sarsons & Saxa Salt don’t need disclaimers?
–EDIT–
https://www.scamadviser.com/check-website/spiritualsalt-com.com
The website's owner is hiding his identity on WHOIS using a paid service
This website does not have many visitors
We found many low rated websites on the same server
We identified popular products frequently sold by scammers
This website has only been registered recently
You’re going to have to do the impossible to eliminate those negative highlights.
Perhaps if you prayed to your ‘Spiritual Salt god, OP…?!