Eats Writes Shoots

Living & Tasting Life's Passions

  • Home
  • Eats
    • Beer
      • Hopped & Bothered Reviews
      • Beer Reviews
        • Amber/Red Ale
        • Bitter
        • Blonde
        • Brown Ale
        • Farmhouse (Saison)
        • Pale Ale
          • India Pale Ale (IPA)
          • Double (Imperial) IPA
          • Imperial Black IPA
          • American Pale Ale
          • English Pale Ale
        • Lager
        • Scotch Ale
        • Seasonal and/or Specialty
          • Beer with Fruit
        • Stout
          • Imperial Stout
          • Milk Stout
        • Wheat Ale
        • Winter Beers
    • My CSA Challenge – 2013 Edition
    • Recipes
      • Appetizers
      • Breakfast
      • Baking
        • Dessert
          • Cookies
      • Drinks and Cocktails
      • Egg
      • Fish
      • Gluten-Free
      • Lunch
      • Mains
        • Asian
          • Thai
        • Barbecue/Grilling
        • Beef
        • Fusion
        • Greek
        • Italian
        • Lamb
        • Mediterranean
        • Mexican
        • Pasta
        • Pork
        • Poultry
        • Veal
        • Vegetarian
      • Preserves
      • Salad
      • Side Dish
      • Soup
  • Writes
    • Canadian Food Experience Project
    • Poetry
    • The “Benjamin” Project
  • Shoots
  • About the Author
You are here: Home / Eats / Salmon Steaks with Lemon and Dill

Salmon Steaks with Lemon and Dill

September 5, 2013 by Dale 2 Comments

Lemon_Dill_SalmonFish tales beget fish recipes.

I’m sure that is written somewhere profound. In preparing my latest entry, The Shore Lunch, for the Canadian Food Experience Project, I was craving fish. The dilemma, as you’ll deduce from the entry, is that I’m unable to find wild, fresh trout where I now live. Inspired by my dill, now starting to go to seed, and with thoughts of lemon swirling in my head, salmon seemed a great substitute which would also allow me to use some seasonal flavours.

I could have made this recipe easier by skipping the marinade — but the truth is, the marinade is the only work in the dish and the dish would pale without the technique. So, yes, you have to plan a few hours to let the fish sit, but other than that, you’re going to find few recipes for salmon that are quicker, easier and tastier meals.

The trick to the “fresh” marinade is that is allows maximum dill/lemon flavours to permeate the salmon without having to overcook the fish which is a definite no-no. Choose salmon steaks on the small to medium size, but regardless of size, make sure they’re a good 1″ (2.5cm) thick. Bigger and/or thicker steaks might take an extra 30-60 seconds; either way, test for doneness and, I repeat, don’t overcook.

Prep time:   10 minutes
Stand time: 90 minutes
Cook time:   9 minutes
Total time:   2 hours
Servings:     6

Grilled Salmon Steaks with Lemon and Dill

INGREDIENTS:

  • Lemon_Dill_Salmon Ingredients6 small/medium sized salmon steaks 1″ thick
  • zest of one lemon
  • Juice of 1/2 lemon
  • 3 tablespoons of fresh dill, divided
  • 2 tablespoons of onion, diced
  • grating of fresh pepper
  • Olive oil
  • Seasoning salt
  • Fresh lemon wedges

DIRECTIONS:

  1. Clean salmon steaks under running water and thoroughly pat them dry with paper towels. Place salmon on a platter and season with fresh ground pepper.
  2. Zest the lemon and sprinkle the salmon, top and bottom with the zest.
  3. Finely chop two tablespoons of dill. For the marinade, it is ok to use parts of the stem as this will be discarded before cooking, anyway. Sprinkle dill over the salmon, top and bottom.
  4. Dice the onion and sprinkle it over the salmon, top and bottom.
    Lemon_Dill_Salmon Marinade
  5. Squeeze lemon juice over the salmon steaks.
  6. Cover fish with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 1 hour.
  7. Remove the salmon 30 minutes before cooking and let stand at room temperature.
    → Bringing the salmon up closer to room temperature, and reducing the temperature shock of putting cold food on the grill, will produce a more tender and flaky fish … and it also promotes faster and deeper absorption of the marinade flavours.
  8. Preheat the grill to 400ºF. Make sure you wipe the grates clean with an oiled paper towel. This will reduce any sticking and tearing of the fish.
  9. After 30 minutes at room temperature, gently remove the bulk of the fresh marinade. Carefully rub olive oil over steaks and season with salt.Prepare lemon wedges and chop additional tablespoon of dill (without stems) and set aside.
    Lemon_Dill_Salmon Seasoned
  10. Place steaks on grill for 2½ minutes then, optionally, give them a quarter turn being careful that they don’t stick to the grates and grill for 2 minutes more (4½ minutes total). Turn the steaks with a long spatula and cook for another 4½ minutes.
    Lemon_Dill_Salmon Grilled Lemon_Dill_Salmon7
    Test for doneness with a fork near the centre bone. Fish should just start to pull away the bone with the fork and be opaque throughout. Remove from grill.
    Lemon_Dill_Salmon off Grill
  11. Serve on plates with a sprinkling of fresh dill and fresh lemon wedges.

    Lemon_Dill_SalmonWine Pairing: Sauvignon Blanc (obvious pairing, I know, but perfect with the dill and lemon).

Share this:

  • Share
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

Filed Under: Eats, Fish, Recipes Tagged With: barbecue, bbq, Cooking, dill, easy, food, fresh, Grill, lemon, marinade, Recipe, salmon, steak

« The Shore Lunch … My First Authentic Canadian Food Experience
My Grandma’s Hamburger Soup (De/Re-constructed) »

Comments

  1. Janet Rörschåch says

    September 6, 2013 at 10:59 am

    Great dish. Please forgive me for the following. Wipe the rim of your plate. Negative space is very important to actually highlighting the beauty of your dish. Right now, it just looks busy. Frame it. That’s from a chef serving food to clients at a restaurant, not as a food photographer. 😀

    Reply
    • Dale says

      September 6, 2013 at 12:37 pm

      Thanks Janet. Good advice. I liked the colour and wanted something more than ‘just’ the salmon on the plate and wanted to further emphasize the dill. But I agree, in the end, there was something about the presentation that didn’t sit right with me either … but you get one shot because the food is getting cold and you’re starving at this point. So very great to get constructive tips after the fact to learn from and improve … thank you. 🙂

      Reply

I would love to read your comments ....Cancel reply

30 Poems in 30 Days – Global Poetry Writing Month (2022)

  • A Love Song

    A Love Song
  • Chosen

    Chosen
  • Wormwood

    Wormwood
  • Bashert

    Bashert
  • Lumber Dog

    Lumber Dog
  • Aisling for the Land

    Aisling for the Land
  • Hard Boiled Boy

    Hard Boiled Boy
  • The Blasted

    The Blasted
  • Sense of Time

    Sense of Time
  • We Reflect

    We Reflect
  • A Family Grown

    A Family Grown
  • Fly — Away

    Fly — Away
  • Curtains

    Curtains
  • A Question Heard

    A Question Heard
  • The Storm

    The Storm
  • A Dis-Ode to the Mushoom

    A Dis-Ode to the Mushoom
  • Bun in the Oven

    Bun in the Oven
  • The world don’t owe you nothing

    The world don’t owe you nothing
  • the syrphid

    the syrphid
  • Osborne

    Osborne
  • Love is not a Word

    Love is not a Word
  • Meta

    Meta
  • Super-Pop

    Super-Pop
  • footprints on the sands of time

    footprints on the sands of time
  • Spring Grows

    Spring Grows
  • Neptune’s Recline

    Neptune’s Recline
  • Red Light, Green Light, Stop

    Red Light, Green Light, Stop
  • Wuthering Heights

    Wuthering Heights
  • Afterwinter

    Afterwinter
  • The Story of a Dog

    The Story of a Dog

Recent Posts

  • A Love Song
  • Chosen
  • Wormwood
  • Bashert
  • Lumber Dog

Join My Community

Simply enter your email address and never miss another post.

Join 827 other subscribers

2012-2022 © Dale Schierbeck.

All rights reserved. All material and content is the original property of Dale Schierbeck and “EatsWritesShoots” 2022. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without expressed and written permission from this blog’s author and owner is strictly prohibited. Links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to the author (“Dale Schierbeck”) and the site (“EatsWritesShoots”) and with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

Connect with Me on Facebook

Connect with Me on Facebook

Top Posts & Pages

  • Recipe for Low-Phosphorus Dog Food ~ Caring for a Dog with Chronic Renal Failure
  • Ben ~ In Memoriam
  • Blood of Bean
  • Tagine with Merguez Sausage and Winter Vegetables
  • Fat Tug | IPA | Driftwood Brewery

Join the Conversation

  • mb on Ben ~ In Memoriam
  • Dale on Ground Beef Tacos
  • Nicholas Robert Parkes on Ground Beef Tacos
  • Molly on Recipe for Low-Phosphorus Dog Food ~ Caring for a Dog with Chronic Renal Failure
  • Dale on Chosen

RSS Feeds

RSS feed RSS - Posts

RSS feed RSS - Comments

Archives

Categories

Copyright © 2025 · Foodie Pro Theme by Shay Bocks · Built on the Genesis Framework · Powered by WordPress

 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d