Salmon Steamed in Parchment
Submitted by Penfold
Salmon steamed in parchment paper with a teriyaki-orange marinade, green onions, and fresh orange slices. An elegant en papillote method that keeps the fish moist with easy cleanup.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
15 minREADY
1 hrsCooking salmon en papillote (in parchment) traps steam inside a sealed packet, so the fish essentially braises in its own juices and marinade. The result is impossibly moist salmon with zero risk of drying out.
The marinade here blends teriyaki sauce with fresh orange zest and juice for a sweet-savory glaze that caramelizes slightly inside the hot packet. Orange slices laid on top steam along with the fish, releasing more citrus aroma as they soften.
After a quick 30-minute soak in the marinade, each steak goes onto its own sheet of parchment, gets topped with green onions, pepper, and those orange rounds, then gets sealed tight. The packets puff up in the oven as the steam builds, and you serve them right in the paper for a presentation that looks far more impressive than the effort involved.
Chef Tips
- Crimp the parchment edges tightly to create a proper seal. Loose folds leak steam and dry the fish out
- Don’t skip the 30-minute marinade. The teriyaki needs time to penetrate the flesh
- The salmon is done when it flakes easily and the center is opaque. Start checking at 12 minutes
- Let guests open their own packets at the table for the full aromatic reveal
Variations
Ingredients
Directions
Place salmon in large plastic bag with mixture of teriyaki sauce, orange peel and juice.
Press air out of bag; close top securely.
Refrigerate 30 minutes, turning over once or twice.
Reserving marinade, remove salmon and place 1 steak in center of each 4 pieces of parchment paper (16 x 12-inch each).
Sprinkle green onions, pepper and 1 tablespoon reserved marinade over each steak, then top with 2 or 3 orange slices.
Fold parchment over salmon to enclose and crimp edges to seal, place on baking sheet.
Bake in preheated 375℉ (190℃) oven 12 to 15 minutes, or until fish flakes easily with fork and is opaque in center.
Serve in paper.
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