First I took a large fillet of salmon and cut into pieces, each about 8 oz. (225 grams).
I measured out 1/3 cup soy sauce and 1/3 cup maple syrup.
After mixing the soy sauce and maple syrup together, I poured it into a 9x13 in. pan. I placed the salmon filets flesh side down into the mixture. In my case, I had more salmon than could fit in a single pan, so I whipped up another batch of soy sauce and maple syrup for the extra pieces. I slipped these into the refrigerator while preparing the glaze.
I then poured 2 tablespoons of soy sauce and a 1/4 cup of maple syrup into a small saucepan. I then brought it to a simmer and held it there for a couple minutes to thicken up into a glaze. I set aside two tablespoons for use later and took the rest outside to the grill (which I turned on).
I took the salmon out of the refrigerator after it had been in there for fifteen minutes and liberally covered the flesh of the fillets with fresh ground black pepper.
I took the salmon out to my preheated grill. After soaking a paper towel in some vegetable oil, I used a pair of tongs and rubbed the grill with oil to keep the fish from sticking. Then, I placed the salmon flesh side down on the grill over high heat for three minutes.
I flipped the salmon over (still on high heat) and brushed some glaze over each piece (onto the exposed flesh).
After two minutes (when the thickest part of the filet has been cooked about halfway through), I brushed more glaze onto the flesh and flipped them over onto the low heat side of the grill.
After another two minutes, the salmon is done. Brush the reserved glaze on and it's ready to serve. If cooked properly, the salmon should have a nice crust as well as a soft almost flaky interior. (If it flakes easily, then it's a bit overcooked.)}?>
The final judgment? Tina liked it - so it's a keeper.}?>
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Preheat grill | ||||||
1/3 cup soy sauce | mix | soak 15 min. | ||||
1/3 cup maple syrup | ||||||
6 8 oz. salmon fillets | pepper | grill flesh down | grill skin down | grill flesh down on low | ||
2 Tbs. soy sauce | reduce | |||||
1/4 cup maple syrup |
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I'm an expat American living in Belgium and cooking is my hobby. Over here discussing things like the benefits of omega-3 and the horrible dangers of hydrogenated fat are normal, I did not think many in the States were aware of these things. I am very happy to see that you are spreading the word Mike. Nowadays people spend a fortune on schools for their children and still pump them full of trans fats. A simple step like upping the omega-3 and eliminating hydrogenated fats would add many IQ points on to your little loved ones brains.
I too recently reintroduced salmon into my family's diet to increase our omega-3 intake. The problem with salmon is that the best type, wild salmon, is rare and expensive. The standard cultivated version is fed with pellets that contain dangerous chemicals. Luckily here in Belgium we now have organic cultivated salmon, which is much, much lower in pollutants.
I think the best way to serve salmon is from a recipe in the pink Chez Pannise cookbook, grilled salmon with a tomato/basil vinaigrette sauce. I bet my children would like this glazed recipe that you have presented today Mike so I'm going to give it a try.
BTW if you are interested, I can send over a translation of some simple recipes that are currently quite popular with home cooks in France and Belgium.
You're welcome to post recipes in the forum for everyone to enjoy. I read the forum as well and sometimes bake or cook something that strikes me as interesting and convenient.
Michael
If I was grilling it like you did, I would do skin side first, and turn it just once.
Is it possible for one to grill on low with a george forman?
put two forman's next to each other, turn one on, and cook on the other...?
Or should I just avoid grilling recipes that require any precision?
Thanks,
Sasha
Since the George Foreman electric grill doesn't have high/low settings, I would grill the salmon on an open grill (or for half the time with the grill closed). You'll have to be real careful when watching the salmon to make sure it doesn't get overdone while you are finishing the cooking.
The problem with constant high heat is that the outside gets fully cooked (and over cooked) before the insides are done. Low heat cooking allows a more even temperature rise within the food being cooked (especially for larger pieces of meat). My suggestion is to give it a try; the results should still be more than satisfactory.
Michael
Salmon is the best fish ever. But not baked! We are spoiled over here in NZ where our food tastes wonderful. Here's how salmon gets prepared in my house.
- Buy fresh salmon fillets
- Remove skin and bones
- Cut salmon into portions (similar size to the glazed salmon recipe)
- Marinade in fresh lemon juice for at least 6 hours (we have a lemon tree out back - very handy)
- Once marinaded, fry the salmon in a non stick frying pan. Don't add oil. Remember to put extractor fan on as it can smell quite strong.
- Season the salmon with salt and pepper before turning in the frying pan
- Serve with hot potatoes (we just boil the potatoes and serve with a touch of cheese dip).
I don't typically include time in the recipe summaries because it isn't too meaningful unless a specific temperature is specified (as in baking). Time isn't all that accurate of a means to convey how long to cook something since humidity, ambient temperature, and other factors will affect cooking time. Also, I leave it out to save space in the summary.
For this specific recipe, it's more important to grill the flesh and skin to form a crust than for any specific time. Hope it's not too inconvenient that it's been left out, but hopefully you read the whole article and the summary is there to remind you to do certain steps - not to replace the article.
Thanks,
Michael
Salmon is good for you, but just FYI - Farm-raised salmon does not have the Omega 3 fatty acids because it gets those from the micro-organisms it feeds on in the wild.
Can I use honey instead of maple syrup?Because i sometimes use honey to glaze my 5 spice roast chicken.
would that taste weird?
Thanks.
My Name Is Fake
No, honey would not taste weird. The substitution for honey can be made one for one with maple syrup. Just go ahead and use 1/3 cup honey instead of 1/3 cup maple syrup and 1/4 cup honey in the glaze instead of the 1/4 cup maple syrup. Should taste great!
However I made a few changes to it.
1) Added a little bit of lemon into the Maple Syrup / Soy mix, I thought the acidity would help it marinade better. I'm not sure if it did help, but it tasted fine.
2) After I put the fish on the BBQ, I used the Maple Syrup / Soy mix the fish had been dunked in, and boiled off some excess liquid.
When I flipped the fish over, I used some of this to glaze the sides, and when the fish was cooked, I used the remaining (fairly thick) mix to glaze the meal on plates. This made it taste like candy, maybe next time I'll cut back on the maple syrup if I intend to do the glaze again.
Want to know how this Oregonian does it?
Take a skin-on salmon fillet (I get about 1.3 lbs for my 4-person family). Use tweezers or needle nose pliars to pull out the pin bones.
Place on a piece of foil slightly larger than the piece of salmon. Crimp the edges of the foil up slightly to retain some of the salmon fat as it cooks (makes the edge of the salmon taste wonderful).
Using a sharp flat edge (not serrated) knife, eyeball the serving pieces you want to end up with after cooking and slice the raw salmon into serving size pieces. Slice down to (or almost down to) the skin. Not all the way through. I do this at an angle for better presentation - also, if you slice after the fish is cooked it makes the slices look torn.
Sprinkle the fish with salt and pepper and brush liberally with marinade. (recipe follows)
Place the foil and salmon foil side down directly over hot coals on an outdoor grill. Brush with marinade again, and cover with vents open.
Check the salmon every couple of minutes, brushing liberally with marinade until done. Depending on the size of the fish, it's thickness, and the heat of your grill, total cooking time on the grill will range from 10 to 20 minutes.
I take a metal fork that I use to pierce the thickest part of the salmon and then touch it immediately to my lower lip. If the tine of the fork is warm (meaning the center of the salmon is warm) take it off the grill (I use a wooden pizza peel to take it off). The salmon will continue to cook slightly under residual heat until it's served.
I place the salmon and its foil on a cutting board (or a stack of old newspapers) use a spatula to lift the salmon off the foil/skin, and place it on the plates. It comes off easily after it's cooked.
This is a terrific recipe that yield delicious salmon attractive enough to serve the most discriminating diner. It's easy, and because there is no turning, you have almost zero chance of disaster.
Marinade recipe:
Take 1/3 cup butter, melted
Whisk in:
1/3 cup dry white wine
3 Tablespoons soy sauce
3 Tablespoons lemon juice
1 to 3 cloves garlic, pressed through a garlic press
This is best with wild salmon, because the natural fat content yields a truly delectable piece of grilled fish.
I found that I needed more maple syrup ot the flavor got lost--but that may just be my local syrup maker.
Note that salmon is high in omega-3 but that it is also a predator, and thus concentrates heavy metals and other pollutants in the sea. Wild is better than fish farmed, probably because a major element in fish food is offal of fish processing--which concentrates things one more step.
About fish farming, it would seem to be a 'good thing' as it would seem to protect the wild fish--it doesn't! Fish food pellets are made from wild caught fish! (In the US for salmon and trout at least.)
Fish farming as done in southasia where it is integrated with rice and duck culture does not have the same problem.
Love the site! look forward to trying out more recipes. :)
thanks!
:huh:
After doing a search for it I ended up here and it refreshed my memory on how to do this. Have the steak marinating now, but will it be ok if I use a cross cut section and pan fry it instead?
Absolutely, no doubt about it. When I buy fish, I want what's freshest. I ask what was just put out and that's what I buy. It almost doesn't matter to me what kind of fish it is.
I did have to up the quantity by a fair amount for the glaze though because maybe I was spreading it on too thick but I didn't have nearly enough. I about doubled it I think.
I had several people ask me for the recipe though so like you said, this one's a keeper.
Ok, so we've got a nice hot grill here and we're going to go ahead and start some salmon fillets. I've already given it a scrub with a rag with some canola oil on it, and I'm going to go ahead and give it a quick spray with some grill spray here. Be careful not to hold the can too close to the flame here. I'm going to start this salmon with the flesh side down first. I've seasoned that with a dry seasoning mixture of garlic salt and lemon pepper so I'm going to get some good lines on this guy. Then we're going to flip him on the skin side. Once the flesh side is showing up, I've got a butter mixture over here that's got some beer butter and onions and garlic salt in it so I can brush that fish down throughout the cooking process. If you notice, I've got these dials cranked just above the off position. I don't want a really intense heat for this fish, but it's hot enough to cook on. So now we'll shut the lid here and get some of that good smoke kickin'.
Check out this site for more great recipes including free videos:
http://homegarden.expertvillage.com/interviews/barbecue-grilling.htm
I keep the skins on. They help keep the salmon together on the grill (especially if you don't pay attention and overcook them so they become flaky). Also, if done properly the skin can be a crispy treat.
frozen salmon filet coated in olive oil, salt and pepper
then fork or spoon fuls of wasabi mayo on the flesh just enough to coat
bake
Well, we mostly have catfish here in Fort Worth, but I've found a good place for fresh salmon (the grocery store).
I've had salmon most everywhere, even at fine restaurants in the Northwest, but the best I've had (with a single exception) was an afterthought, when I was smoking brisket and ribs on my back porch.
The smoker (with an offset oven, no direct heat) was precisely at 250 degrees F, had been there for hours (so there's wasn't much smoke from newly added wood), when I added 2 large fillets on a rack above the briskets. I smoked them for about an hour, then served immediately after removing from the oven.
Salmon is one of our favorites so here are two of our best:
Grilled Glazed Salmon
2 Salmon filets, skinless, approximately 1" thick
In a separage bowl mix the following:
2 TBS Hoisin Sauce
2 TBS Soy Sauce
2 TBS Honey
2 Cloves garlic, smashed and chopped
Place the filets in a zip lock bag and add the marinade. Marinade no longer than 1/2 hour. Pre heat grill on high. (Our grill is a three burner )Place fish rack on grill and add salmon. Turn grill to medium/off/medium and close lid. Grill 5 minutes, turn salmon over and baste with remaining marinade. Close lid and cook 5 more minutes.
If you don't have a grill, this recipe also works well in the broiler.
Number 2:
Cumin Salmon
Preheat oven to 375*
2 Salmon filets, skinless, approximately 1 inch thick
In a separate dish, melt 2 TBS of butter. Add 2 TBS of fresh lemon juice and mix. Pour over salmon filets once slightly cooled.
Sprinkle the salmon with the following :
Cumin - ground
Sea salt
Ground cracked pepper (I use Monteray Steak Seasoning)
Lay whole bay leaves (approximately 2 - 3 per filet) on top.
Bake in oven 15 - 20 minutes. Don't over cook.
Mangia !!!! B)
[/b]
I'm not sure what the white stuff is - most people call it fat, but I'm not sure if it is. Seems like it's closer to a protein.
In any case, this is normal - but usually only happens when salmon is fully cooked (which in my book means it's over cooked). It's completely edible.
Once it's been cooked, it should keep in the refrigerator for about 3 days. A day or two longer if you overcook the salmon.
-p.
My hubby has passed away, but he would have an absolute cow if he saw the recipes, directions and pictures without associated and exact (+/-) within a few nanoseconds, the drawings to tell you exactly where to place the meat!!!
I just had to throw that in. Told you, I was married to an engineer!
Keep the recipes coming.
I also made the asparagus recipe with Almonds and loved that too! Man, i love this site
Thanks
-EN
I used 100% maple syrup bought from a store. Be careful when buying maple syrup as many of the "popular" brands are simply maple flavored high fructose corn syrup.
Sorry about that. Fifteen minutes works well for me. You can go a little longer - 30 minutes, but much more and I feel that it detracts from the texture.
It should work well with mahi-mahi...
Thanks again for your great blog!
Sheila
All About Boats blog
Paradise Connections Yacht Charters
after cooking the vegitables.(in gravey stage) shall we keep it in fridge? and shall we take it for 3 day? there is any problem?
subbu
Did you post to the wrong article? What vegetables?
When I marinated much longer (an hour or more) I found the salmon was way too mushy. I really didn't like the texture. For me, salmon is a pretty finicky meat - cook it too long and it's no good, too mushy and it's no good, unfresh and it's no good... but when you get it right - it's awesome.
Since I'm too lazy to fire up the grill, I usually preheat a good ol' cast iron pan and when its hot, put in a bit of olive oil. I cook the salmon starting skin side down, for five minutes (or less depending on thickness) each side. This is a foolproof and really, really, really good recipe!
I serve it with a salad made with greens, crumbled goat cheese, toasted pecans and dried cranberries with a homemade honey mustard vinagrette (also simple, foolproof and delicious).
Just to note, I baked it in the oven(rather than grilling it), and it came out fine. I'd love to try this again when I have access to a grill.
keep up the great work. :)
As for the people that marinade the salmon in lemon this would effectively cook the salmon (with the acids).
On a hot grill salmon should only take about 6 mins to cook. Thats about 3 1/2 - 4 mins on 1 side and an additional 2 mins or so on the flip side.
Salmon works best with minimal seasoning. ALWAYS rince your salmon and dry THEN season with salt and pepper before cooking. My faforite pan frying method would be to add 2 fresh sage leaves on each sides of the salmon and nothing else. This method works well with grilling also, but you will want to mince the sage leaves and press said leaves onto the salmon steak/filet.
When grilling or pan frying only flip ONCE. Flipping more than once can ruin the look of the steak/filet. If grilling always start on the best looking side of the salmon and put that side down on the gill to get nice looking grill marks. If desired, after about 2 mins rotate the salmon 90 degrees to get criss cross grill marks.
Again, 6 mins is about all it should take to cook a salmon steak or filet.
Try it, like it, eat it.
Salmon goes great with roasted potato's, wild rice, mashed potato's, roasted tomatoes, asparagus, brussel sprouts, and many other wonderful veggies and starches.
HOpe you enjoy.
dano
1) Heat up the George Forman to full heat
2) Take your FROZEN salmon, rinse under cold water to remove any ice.
3) Brush the FROZEN salmon with olive oil on both sides.
4) Place the FROZEN and oiled salmon on the hot George Forman grill and close the lid.
5) Cook for 7-10 minutes, turning as needed to ensure the sides get cooked.
The FROZEN salmon ensures the fish stays moist during cooking, the olive oil creates a perfect crust. It's delicious!
Also ... for the perfect Medium Rare steak on a George Forman grill, butter and season both sides of a THAWED steak ... place on a hot grill, close the lid and cook for 7 minutes.
Ingredients
Wild caught salmon filet with skin on
Salt
Fresh ground pepper
Extra virgin olive oil
1 lemon
Equipment
Oven with broiler access
Reynolds Non stick aluminum foil (really works)
Metal baking sheet or roasting pan
Oven mitts
Procedure
If salmon is in fridge, take out at least one hour prior to cooking and get as close to room temp as possible. Make sure filet is clean and dry. Set oven to broil and place baking sheet in oven or under broiler. Objective is to get the metal as hot as possible prior to placing salmon on it.
Take 5 minutes to prepare the salmon while metal is heating. Place salmon skin side down on non-stick side of aluminum foil. Add salt and pepper immediately before cooking. Position the foil and fish so it is easy to slide onto the metal baking sheet (on a counter for example). DO NOT cover wrap fish with foil, merely use it as a "plate".
This is the most tricky part of the recipe. Once the metal is as hot as possible, take out of oven and slide the foil with salmon onto it. Be very careful as the pan will burn you instantly. It should sizzle and start cooking right away. This is what you want. Place under broiler about 2-3 inches away from heating element. Leave broiler door/window open as you will be cooking with direct heat and you need to watch the fish cook.
WATCH CAREFULLY. The filet will take no more than 10 minutes to cook, most likely less depending on size/thickness of filet. If anything, this step requires all your attention so as not to burn the fish. Once top of filet is browned, take out. Salmon will continue to cook as it cools. Drizzle with high quality olive oil and squeeze juice of lemon. Perfectly cooked salmon should be very moist and slightly pink at the center of the thickest part. This method will guarantee cooking through the filet from top and bottom with the timing based simply by the browning of the top of the filet.
Some tips
Spend the extra $ for quality salmon. Wild caught is best.
Marinate as you like but it may interfere with the browning process.
Bringing salmon as close to room temp as possible prior to placing in over is essential for predictable cooking.
Herbs such as fresh chopped dill can be added when taken out of oven.
Method will work for whole salmon filet or portions and other fish.
enjoy.
Filet of Salmon
2 pieces of foil
butter
lemon
salt
pepper
dill
Place the Salmon on the foil
place a few slices of stick butter on the Salmon
Salt, Pepper, Dill, lemon juice to taste
Cover with the other piece of foil and fold the edges to seal
Place the foil package in the top rack of the dishwasher.
Load the dishwasher with dirty dishes and soap.
Run the Regular wash cycle.
When the Regular cycle is done, your dishes are clean and the Salmon is fully cooked. I've tried this twice and the Salmon came out perfectly delicious both times. The heat of washing and drying the dishes apparently steams the Salmon to perfection. Enjoy.
just want to know if anyone has ever used the hfcs maple flavoured syrup in this recipe and how it turned out. i like the real stuff myself, but its ridiculously expensive where i live.
that's in the 130-140'F range.
>>cooking in the dishwasher
yup. that works - with the caveat you need a "drying cycle" - that boosts the dishwasher air temp to 'dry' the dishes. messy. there are easier ways . . .
>>hfcs maple syrup
can it. use the real stuff. it's expensive but you don't need three quarts to flavor a salmon steak/filet; 2-3 tablespoons is enough for a 2-3 pound filet; half tablespoon per steak works around here...
wild cooked salmon has lines of whiter areas that are their fat..but it does not ooze out.
white stuff from farmed salmon....UCK!...badbadbad...beware!
Here is how it came out (I apologize for the image quality, but we were eager to eat while it was nice and hot):
I've also found nice salmon recipes
on this SITE: http://www.weloveseafood.com/
quit posting your idiotic nonsense here, you idiot... People hate it when they are asking a legitimate question and some idiot who doesn't have a clue has to chime in
More white stuff comes out if the Salmon is very cold (like partially thawed) before cooking.
It is denatured protein and is OK to eat...
It has happened when I have cooked salmon in Alaska, fished right out of the waters in Alaska many many times,
-------------------------------
On September 01, 2009 at 05:46 PM, gconnors (guest) said...
Subject: that white stuf that oozes out after cooking salmon
the white stuff that oozes out of cooked salmon is not normal.....this indicates it is farmed!...this is the crud they feed and inject into the fish.
wild cooked salmon has lines of whiter areas that are their fat..but it does not ooze out.
white stuff from farmed salmon....UCK!...badbadbad...beware!
I wanted to make a couple comments:
1. There's a lot of different soy sauce brands and flavors, so if someone is put-off by a certain soy sauce, it's worth it to try another one. I am partial to the Maggi brand imported from France (German and US imports of the same brand are not even close).
2. No all Oregonians have boats. Nor do they want to tell everyone "I'm an Oregonian and this is how we eat salmon in Oregon." Personally I am from Oregon and I buy my salmon from Costco.
3. To the omega-3 comments: Omega 3 comes from many sources, and might be in farm fish was well. Salmon, and this recipe, are just delicious. Even if it made me rotund and sluggish, I would eat this.
Thanks MC!
G
Here is how it came out (I apologize for the image quality, but we were eager to eat while it was nice and hot):
Wow, from its picture, i can feel the aroma of delicious. hehehe B)
1. There's a lot of different soy sauce brands and flavors, so if someone is put-off by a certain soy sauce, it's worth it to try another one. I am partial to the Maggi brand imported from France (German and US imports of the same brand are not even close).
Yes, a huge difference. Any health food store should have some good options. I buy tamari (a type of Japanese soy sauce, usually fermented without wheat) when available.
I did not marinade the salmon, but I did prepare and (liberally) use the glaze. I also added about a tablespoon of lemon juice. WOW! The salmon turned out amazing! I grilled for myself and my girlfriend (who had said she "isn't crazy about salmon"), and she even said it was excellent.
Thanks for sharing!
Recently I've been doing fillets of salmon on the smoker with really nice results. I'm not going to lie to you - smoked salmon with cream cheese and crackers or cream cheese and a bagel is awsome.
The recipe I followed is at Instructibles smoked salmon recipe. It turns out beautiful.
Just another option to get those Omega's.