Use this quick and easy Teriyaki Salmon recipe to make a light and savory meal any night of the week. Salmon fillets are pan-grilled to tender perfection in the traditional method and finished with an authentic homemade teriyaki sauce.
Growing up in Japan, I enjoyed eating a variety of fish, with salmon being one of the most readily available option in our household. It’s a great source of protein and healthy Omega-3 fatty acids in our diet. Today, I’m going to share with you an authentic Teriyaki Salmon recipe and illustrate how the Japanese prepare it at home.
The salmon fillets are pan-grilled to achieve a golden-brown exterior while retaining their tender and juicy texture. We then finish it off with a sweet-savory glazed homemade Teriyaki Sauce. It’s easy and absolutely no fuss.
Table of Contents
- What Makes Authentic Teriyaki Salmon
- How to Cut the Salmon into Japanese-Style Fillets
- Homemade Teriyaki Sauce with 4 Ingredients
- Important Condiments: Sake and Mirin
- How to Cook Teriyaki Salmon
- Cooking Tips
- Frequently Asked Questions
- What to Serve with Teriyaki Salmon
- What to Do with Leftover Teriyaki Salmon
- Related Recipes
What Makes Authentic Teriyaki Salmon
I noticed most of the teriyaki salmon recipes online are quite different from how the Japanese make it at home. Here are the main differences:
- Make your own teriyaki sauce. In Japan, convenient “teriyaki sauce” in a bottle is not as common as the ones found in American grocery stores. Instead, we typically prepare teriyaki sauce from scratch. Each family makes the sauce to suit their preferences and with the ingredients they have at hand. More on authentic teriyaki sauce below.
- Cut the salmon into Japanese-style fillets. The fillets are thinly sliced, about 1 inch (2.5 cm) thick, and cut diagonally (see the next section). Since they are thinner, they cook faster in a frying pan.
- We do not marinate the salmon. Japanese cuisine focuses on bringing out the original flavor of an ingredient without overwhelming it with spices and seasonings.
- Pan-fry the salmon. Cooking in an oven is not very common in Japan. Most of the dishes are cooked on the stove as a typical Japanese kitchen has a countertop microwave oven and does not have an oven unless you’re a baker.
How to Cut the Salmon into Japanese-Style Fillets
In Japan, the salmon fillet is sliced differently than in the US. You will find the fillet available in diagonal cuts and thinner slices. Each cut is about ½ to ¾ inch (1.3-2 cm) thick.
If you buy salmon as a whole fish, you can fillet it the Japanese way. It will cook faster and absorb flavors quickly. Check out my tutorial here.
Homemade Teriyaki Sauce with 4 Ingredients
When you come across authentic Japanese teriyaki recipes, you’ll find that 99% of them use just 4 ingredients: soy sauce, sake, mirin, and optionally sugar.
The best way to start making teriyaki sauce is to use equal parts of soy sauce, sake, and mirin and add sugar to your liking. My basic teriyaki sauce ratio is 2:2:2:1.
For optimal taste, we often play around with the ratio, depending on the ingredients and flavor combination of the dish. Therefore, each teriyaki recipe should have a slightly different taste.
In this recipe, for example, I cook the salmon with butter to give it a layer of rich creaminess. So I’ve tweaked the teriyaki sauce ratio to work perfectly with all the flavors.
If you’re a beginner cook, start with my basic teriyaki sauce (2:2:2:1). It’s easy to remember and you’re guaranteed a delicious sauce!
Important Condiments: Sake and Mirin
Japanese cooking doesn’t require many condiments compared to other ethnic cuisines. However, two of the essential pantry items I highly recommend are sake and mirin. Japanese recipes use both of these condiments 90% of the time (have you noticed?). You can’t create authentic Japanese flavors without sake and mirin because they are foundational to Japanese cooking.
Substitute:
Now, if you can’t consume alcohol, you can read the substitution option in my sake and mirin pantry pages.
Use gluten-free soy sauce or tamari if needed. If you prefer to use honey or maple syrup, go ahead but take care as it burns easily.
How to Cook Teriyaki Salmon
The Ingredients You’ll Need
- Skin-on salmon fillets – ¾ inch (2 cm) thick
- Salt and freshly ground black pepper
- All-purpose flour – You can use cornstarch or potato starch for gluten-free
- Cooking oil (for cooking)
- Unsalted butter (for cooking)
- Sake (for steaming) – You can substitute it with Chinese rice wine, dry sherry, or water
- Homemade teriyaki sauce: sake, mirin, soy sauce, and sugar
The Cooking Steps
- Make the teriyaki sauce by combining the ingredients.
- Season the salmon with salt and black pepper. Coat the fillets with flour.
- Sear the skin of the salmon. Cook the salmon from the skin.
Cooking Tips
- Use skin-on salmon fillets that are in diagonal cut and thinner slices. Don’t remove the skin. It will prevent the flesh from overcooking and drying out. You don’t have to eat it, although it’s delicious and good for you! Each cut is about ½ to ¾ inch (1.3-2 cm) thick. If you buy a whole fish, you can fillet it the Japanese way. It will cook faster and absorb flavors quickly.
- Coat the salmon evenly with flour for crispy skin. This is the secret to juicy salmon. The flour creates a protective layer and retains its umami flavor and juiciness. It also helps to thicken and absorb the sauce well. You can use cornstarch or potato starch for gluten-free.
- Sear the salmon skin before laying it down. Salmon skin is so delicious when it’s crispy. Hold the fillet and press the skin against the hot frying pan’s surface for 15 seconds.
- The presentation side (also the skin side) should go down into the pan first because the pan is clean and you will get the best browning on the first side that hits it.
- Highly recommend getting an instant-read thermometer and cooking the salmon until an internal temperature of 125-130°F* (52-54ºC) is registered at the thickest part of the fillet. Take the guessing out of your cooking: every salmon is cooked perfectly with the thermometer.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Why don’t you add these ingredients to teriyaki sauce while other popular recipes do?
I’ve seen many non-Japanese recipes that include ingredients such as rice vinegar, honey, brown sugar, sesame oil, hoisin sauce, or garlic in the teriyaki sauce. Some recipes also use ground ginger or garlic powder. I would not recommend them if you wish to follow the authentic Japanese cooking method.
Some people even use cornstarch to thicken the sauce, but it is not needed for my recipe. The sauce will be naturally reduced and thickened during the simmering process. Plus, we coat the fish with flour (or starch) which helps thicken it.
We also don’t usually garnish the salmon fillet with sesame seeds, but it’s personal choice.
Depending on the teriyaki recipes, I occasionally add grated ginger and grated onion for extra flavors but never include rice vinegar, sesame oil, and hoisin sauce.
Q: Can I adapt your method for baked teriyaki salmon recipe?
If you prefer to bake or broil the salmon, you can follow the baking method from my Miso Salmon recipe for the instructions. You will need to make the teriyaki sauce separately and brush the salmon with the sauce several times while baking for a minimum of 10-15 minutes.
What to Serve with Teriyaki Salmon
With a sweet and savory soy-based flavor, teriyaki salmon pairs perfectly well with many different side dishes. For a healthy Japanese-style weeknight dinner, I like to serve the fish with pan-grilled asparagus and miso soup, alongside steamed brown rice.
Other veggies such as green beans, Brussels sprouts, cauliflowers, and spinach are also delicious with salmon. Here are more suggestions I think you’d like:
- Blanched Broccoli with Sesame Oil
- Brussels Sprouts with Bacon
- Spinach with Sesame Miso Sauce
- Japanese Potato Salad
- Roasted Cauliflower Kale Salad
- Green Bean with Crumbled Tofu & Sesame
- 15 Best Healthy Side Dishes to Serve with Salmon
For a low-carb diet, you can serve the salmon with cauliflower rice or quinoa.
What to Do with Leftover Teriyaki Salmon
You can do a lot with leftover teriyaki salmon! Here are some of my favorites:
- Teriyaki Salmon Onigirazu (Rice Sandwich)
- Put it in the lunch box (bento), rice bowl, or noodle.
Related Recipes
- Teriyaki Recipes: Check out my authentic Chicken Teriyaki recipe and don’t miss our 17 Best Teriyaki Recipes You Must Make at Home!
- Salmon Recipes: Try out my other salmon recipes which I share on my blog. You can also substitute this recipe with fresh seasonal fish such as yellowtail or other white fish.
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Teriyaki Salmon
Video
Ingredients
For the Teriyaki Sauce
For the Salmon
- 2 skin-on salmon fillets (¾ lb, 340 g; ¾ inch (2 cm) thick)
- ¼ tsp Diamond Crystal kosher salt
- ⅛ tsp freshly ground black pepper
- 1 Tbsp all-purpose flour (plain flour) (use cornstarch or potato starch for gluten-free)
- ½ Tbsp neutral oil (for cooking)
- 1 Tbsp unsalted butter (for cooking)
- 1–2 Tbsp sake (for steaming; can substitute Chinese rice wine, dry sherry, or water)
Instructions
- Gather all the ingredients.
To Make the Teriyaki Sauce
- In a microwave-safe bowl, combine the ingredients for the teriyaki sauce: 1 Tbsp sake, 1 Tbsp mirin, 2 Tbsp soy sauce, and 1 Tbsp sugar. Mix well to dissolve the sugar.
- To help dissolve the sugar, you can microwave the mixture for 30 seconds.
To Prepare the Salmon
- Rinse 2 skin-on salmon fillets and pat dry. Season one side with half of the ¼ tsp Diamond Crystal kosher salt and half of the ⅛ tsp freshly ground black pepper. Tip: The salmon skin will hold the flesh together while cooking.
- Flip over and season the other side with the remaining salt and black pepper.
- Sprinkle half of the 1 Tbsp all-purpose flour (plain flour) on one side of the salmon and coat evenly. Tip: Coating the salmon with flour helps it retain its umami flavor and juiciness. It also helps absorb the sauce and thickens it.
- Flip over and sprinkle the rest of the flour on the other side. Gently press it to adhere and then remove the excess flour.
To Cook the Salmon
- Heat a frying pan over medium heat. When the pan is hot, add ½ Tbsp neutral oil and 1 Tbsp unsalted butter. Take care not to burn the butter. If the frying pan gets too hot, reduce the heat or remove it from the heat temporarily. Then, sear the skin of the salmon fillets: One at a time, press the skin against the hot frying pan‘s surface for 15 seconds before laying it skin side (or presentation side) down in the pan. Repeat with the remaining salmon. Tip: The presentation side (skin side) should go down into the pan first because you will get the best browning on the first side that hits the clean pan.
- Cook the salmon for 3 minutes, or until the bottom is golden brown, and then flip.
- To the pan, add 1–2 Tbsp sake—1 Tbsp for thin fillets and no more than 2 Tbsp for thicker fillets. Cover the pan with a lid and reduce the stove‘s heat to low. Steam the salmon for about 3–5 minutes, depending on the fillet thickness. If the sake has evaporated but the salmon isn‘t cooked through yet, add another tablespoon of sake and continue steaming.
- Cook the salmon until it registers an internal temperature of 125–130°F (52–54ºC) at the thickest part of the fillet (I use a Thermapen instant-read thermometer). Then, transfer the salmon to a tray or plate. These fillets were about ¾–1 inch (2–2.5 cm) in thickness and took roughly 4 minutes to cook. Tip: The USDA recommends cooking fish to an internal temperature of 145°F (63ºC); however, the residual heat will continue to cook the salmon, so you must remove the fillets at 125–130°F (52–54ºC) to avoid overcooking.
- Add the teriyaki sauce ingredients to the pan and increase the heat a bit. When the sauce starts to boil, add the salmon back to the pan.
- Spoon the sauce over the salmon. When the sauce thickens, turn off the heat. Transfer the salmon to a plate and drizzle the sauce on top.
To Serve
- Serve immediately. I like to serve my Teriyaki Salmon as part of a Japanese-style meal with Green Bean Gomaae (Sesame Dressing) or pan-seared asparagus, Tamagoyaki, Homemade Miso Soup, and Steamed Rice. Other side dishes that pair well with this savory-and-sweet salmon include Spinach with Sesame Miso Sauce, Japanese Potato Salad, Blanched Broccoli with Sesame Oil, Green Bean with Crumbled Tofu and Sesame, Brussels Sprouts with Bacon, and Roasted Cauliflower Kale Salad.
To Store
- You can keep the leftovers in an airtight container and store in the refrigerator for up to 3 days and in the freezer for 2 weeks.
Nutrition
Editor’s Note: This post was originally published on April 25, 2013. New step-by-step images and final images were added in March 2022. It’s been republished with a new video and new content on October 13, 2023.
Unfortunately, as you note, your cut of salmon is not an American cut, and I suspect it will make a huge difference in the end result. It’s not an American filet because a skin-on filet would have one side completely covered with skin. On the other hand, an American steak would have skin around its circumference. The cuts for an American filet and an American steak are ninety degrees apart. Yours, as you suggest is on the diagonal between the two, at approximately fourty-five degrees. American skin-on filets are wrong for this recipe. I suggest that you recommend thin steaks, c. half to three-quarts of an inch thick, probably the best substitute.
Hi George! Thanks so much for your kind feedback. In my recipe, I put the thickness for my salmon, which is crucial for how long it’s required to cook. 🙂
Just finished this for dinner tonight. It’s our quick and easy meal. Than you for such a lovely recipe.
I’m so happy to hear you enjoyed it! Thank you Lydia!
Lovely recipe, tastes delicious and so easy, thanks
Thank you for your kind words, Tricia!
I made this the other night. It was wonderful. I’ll definitely flour my fish before I fry them from now on. Great site!
Thank you so much, Jay! I’m so happy to hear you enjoyed this recipe! 🙂
Hi, it looks very delicious and easy to make and I will give it a go tomorrow. But I have one question: should I pour the seasoning in the same pan leaving what is left of oil, butter and salmon’s juice in the pan? Or should I get rid of it all before I pour teriyaki souce in the pan?
Hi Audrius! I like to add the sauce to the leftover salmon oil, butter, and everything in the pan. It adds depth to the sauce, especially with the butter. It’s good. However, if you’re health conscious, you can wipe off some oil, or completely. It’s up to you. 🙂
Hi Namiko! Is there anyway to make this recipe with frozen salmon?
Hi Crystal! You need to defrost before using, but yes. 🙂
Just stumbled on your website looking for a salmon teriyaki recipe! This recipe sounds delicious. hope to try it soon.
Hi Esther! Welcome to my blog! I hope you enjoy this recipe! 🙂
Hello Namiko,
I bought a big and thick salmon from Costco; however, it is impossible to cut it as thin as yours, which is 3/4 inch. I decided to cook and steam with sake longer than you described. But, the salmon is still a little translucent inside and it is not as pink as raw ones.
I took a bite and it was soft but I decided to put it on oven for food safety. Then it became tougher and flakier. I wonder if eating salmon with a little rare from inside is safe to eat. Overall I like the sauce!
Hi Sam! At Step 5, I’d probably add a bit more sake than I specified (maybe 2 Tbsp, instead of 1) and cover to cook for 5-8 minutes, depending on the thickness of your salmon. As long as it’s covered, the moist inside the pan should keep the salmon moist, but it’s hard to do the same with oven. Hope this helps! Oh another tip. If you freeze the salmon little bit (try 1 hour and see if it’s hard enough to slice), you can slice thinner too. 🙂
I tried this recipe a while back because you mentioned in your post that it is one of your children’s favorites and I figured it MUST be good! It is a big hit with my family and now it is pretty much the only recipe I use to make salmon! I particularly enjoy the insight you give into Japanese cooking and ingredients. Thank you!
Hi Seanna! Thank you so much for trying this recipe! I’m so glad you enjoyed this recipe. Thank you for your kind feedback! 🙂
So you do eat the skin! I made this a couple times and last time atell the skin and it was sooooo good! I was nervous I would get sick or something but I didn’t. I’m glad we can eat it it’s delicious!
Hi Carmen! Yes we make it crunchy so the skin is not so rubbery. 🙂 We put it inside of sushi roll etc too!
So unagi must be cooked in a similar way for a dragon roll right? That ones my favorite and I always saw the skin and thought they must cook it a certain way so it’s edible.
なみせんせい
ありがとうございます!
Hi Carmen! Basically you have to cook till crispy if you want to eat the skin. 🙂
We only eat the skin IF the salmon is either wild or sometimes the organic feed raised salmon. I read “somewhere” that just plain farm raised salmon skin should not be consumed. I prefer purchasing all seafood from a reptuable seafood store …….once in a blue moon I do purchase from Whole Foods.
Thank you again, Nami! I made this recipe for dinner tonight, using some Alaskan King Salmon. We served it with homemade miso soup, edamame, and rice. Not only did we think it was the best teriyaki I have ever made, I thought it might be the best I’ve ever eaten. 🙂
Hi Jessica! Oh that sounds delicious!!! And your homemade meal is just like the meal I’ve been craving for during our kitchen renovation. I can almost eat it… can’t wait. Thanks so much for trying my recipe! I’m glad you enjoyed it!
Thak you for your recipie! I made it yesterday and everyone enjoyed it.
i forgot to boil the sauce enough to make it really thick though.
Can you explain me something please, I thought that teriyaki means to make like layers of sauce on the meat or fish whilst cooking so it looks shiny?
And can you use this sauce recipie to marinate meat and fish?
Many thanks!
Hi Helen! I’m so happy to hear everyone enjoyed it. Thanks for your kind feedback. 🙂
Teriyaki literally means “luster” (teri) “grill” (yaki). In Japan, we usually use this term for cooking that involves frying the food in the pan and then season with soy sauce, sake, and mirin, (sugar). So it can be referred as cooking method, not so much of the sauce’s name. You can use this sauce to marinate the meat.
I mentioned about teriyaki sauce here:
https://www.justonecookbook.com/how_to/teriyaki-sauce/
Hope this helps!
Hi hi, is there a reason to use both sake and mirin since both are kind of same sake? I am very confuse when can i use these 2 seasoning so very afraid to buy and left in the shelf.
Hi Ivy! It’s similar, but they are different. Mirin is sake + sugar in simple form, but the liquid is more syrupy than sake that has sugar. Mirin gives luster that sugar doesn’t give. Japanese cooking (including my recipes) requires sake and mirin often, and they are necessity in most of the recipes. I recommend buying a small bottle to start, if you plan to cook some Japanese food. 🙂
Thank you, Nami. Your recipe was so easy to follow and my notoriously picky eater ate his salmon and wanted more rice to go with his sauce.
Hi Ada! Aww I’m so happy to hear this! Thanks so much for your kind feedback, and I’m super happy your son enjoyed this dish! 😀
I’ve been using this recipe for teriyaki salmon for about 2 years now and decided to do it with gindara (cod) today. Best fish dish I’ve ever had!
Hi Jade! Thank you so much for using this recipe all the time! I’m so glad to use the marinade for Gindara and enjoyed it!
Have you tried my Miso Cod recipe? It’s GOOD too!!
https://www.justonecookbook.com/black-cod-with-miso/