Steamed Salmon. Steamed Salmon is a healthy and nutritious method to prepare this delicate flavored fish. A one-inch thick salmon fillet will steam in six to eight minutes and will be moist, flavorful and delicious. If you are steaming thicker fillets, add another three or four minutes to the cooking time for every half-inch thickness of salmon. It is full of protein, vitamin A, and omega fatty acids, which are essential to the proper functioning of the heart and brain. Steamed salmon can be served hot, warm or even chilled.
If serving chilled, you can steam and chill it a few hours ahead of time.
Drizzle the soy sauce, salt and pepper over the salmon.
Sprinkle with the scallions and ginger.
You can have Steamed Salmon using 7 ingredients and 3 steps. Here is how you achieve it.
Ingredients of Steamed Salmon
- You need of Salmon.
- You need 1 of tpbs soya sauce.
- You need 1 of tpbs Sesame oil.
- Prepare of White pepper powder.
- You need 1 of tpbs water.
- Prepare Slices of ginger.
- You need of Chopped garlic.
Place haricots verts and corn in second bamboo basket, and stack on salmon basket. Carefully place a frying pan of just-boiled water on the lower oven rack. Arrange the salmon on the prepared sheet pan, season generously with salt and pepper, and place on the upper oven rack. Finely grate over the lemon zest and squeeze over the juice.
Steamed Salmon step by step
- Wash the salmon and place it on the preferred plate.
- Put soya sauce, sesame oil, pepper powder, water, ginger and garlic all together in a bowl and mix it well..
- Pour the sauce over the salmon and put it to steam (15min- 20min ready to serve).
Meanwhile, Find a heatproof plate or nonreactive cake or pie pan that will hold the salmon fillets and will also fit in the steamer tray with about one-inch left around the edges. When salmon is steamed with fresh ginger, fish sauce, and premium rice wine, it takes on a creamy texture that cannot be achieved with any other cooking method. As a final step, hot, garlic-flavored oil is poured over the salmon to sear in the juices. From the Wild Ginger Restaurant, Seattle WA. Pike Place Public Market Seafood Cookbook by Braiden Rex-Johnson.