x

Balsamic Honey Glazed Salmon Recipe

Oven baked salmon served with steamed vegetables is such a classic home-made dish because we know oil-rich salmon is good for us and such meals are just so easy and quick to prep. However it really can get boring over time so I like to play around with different sauces that I can glaze my salmon with. For this recipe, only 3 ingredients are needed for the sauce – honey, balsamic vinegar and hoisin sauce – so it’s almost like an Asian BBQ sauce that has a good balance of sweetness, tanginess and savouriness. The portion of the sauce that serves 2 persons seems to be a little too much because itย has dual-purpose so it can be a dipping sauce for the side vegetables too. How convenient ๐Ÿ˜‰ Enjoy!

Balsamic Honey Glazed Salmon Recipe

Balsamic Honey Glazed Salmon Recipe

Ingredients (serves 2)
2 salmon fillets
2 tbsp honey
2 tbsp balsamic vinegar
2 tbsp hoisin sauce
2 cloves garlic, coarsely chopped
steamed vegetables as side

Instructions
1. Marinate the salmon fillets with honey, balsamic vinegar, hoisin sauce and garlic. Chill inย fridge for 30 minutes before cooking.
2. Preheat oven to 180 deg C at Grill with fan. Line a baking tray with aluminium foil and lightly grease with cooking spray.
3. Transfer the salmon fillets (skin up) onto the baking tray and insert into highest shelf of oven. Bake for 10-12 minutes till golden brown.
4. Pour the remaining marinade into a pan and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer till the sauce reduces and thickens.
5. Spoon the sauce over the salmon fillets and serve with steamed vegetables or any side of your choice.

13 Comments

  • Linda says:

    Another delicious meal!! ๐Ÿ™‚

    • Geri Tan says:

      Thank you dear! Iโ€™m deeply honoured that youโ€™ve nominated my blog for this award and I really appreciate that. However as I have previously accepted similar awards, Iโ€™m therefore no longer accepting new nominations as it can get too spammy to repeat posts of the same nature on my blog ๐Ÿ™‚ I hope you understand. Thanks again and congrats on your nomination!! ๐Ÿ™‚

      • miss.teah says:

        I totally understand! I would’ve done the same thing, because it asks you to list 7-15 things about yourself I feel that at some point I would run out of things to write about without getting too personal.

        • Geri Tan says:

          Lol, that’s true. I’m thinking more from my readers’ point of view – don’t think they will be that interested to read stuffs about me – I’m such a boring person! Lol ๐Ÿ™‚

  • I love salmon this looks delicious

  • Sabrina says:

    Hi, this looks yummy! I wanted to let you know I think you’re doing a really nice job with your blog and I nominated you for the versatile blogger award. Check out official rules and info here: https://versatilebloggeraward.wordpress.com/vba-rules/

    • Geri Tan says:

      Thank you, Sabrina ๐Ÿ™‚ Iโ€™m deeply honoured that youโ€™ve nominated my blog for this award and I really appreciate that. However as I have previously accepted similar awards, Iโ€™m therefore no longer accepting new nominations as it can get too spammy to repeat posts of the same nature on my blog. I hope you understand. Thanks again and congrats on your nomination!!

  • Nellyn says:

    Hi Geri,
    Will like to make these salmon recipe. Can I ask when you say skin side up , meaning skin is pressed against the sheets right ? Any reason for not baking with skin side down 1st , like how it’s normally down on the pan over stovetop. Sorry, I just got an oven n never bake before , thanks in advance.
    Cheers, Nellyn

    • Geri Tan says:

      Hi Nellyn, ‘skin side up’ means the skin is facing upwards and the flesh side is on the aluminium foil/baking sheet. The reason why it’s skin side up for this recipe because I’ve used the oven-broiling method as the heating element is on the ceiling of the oven so the skin can be crisped up a bit. The baking tray has to be inserted at the highest shelf of oven so it’s closest to the heat. If you place salmon skin down, very likely the skin will get stuck to the aluminium foil unless you grease the foil with a lot of oil. Also, if you like a more crispy skin (like pan-fried version), you can rub a little olive or vegetable oil on the skin before broiling. For me, I skipped that just to minimise the grease. Do give it a try and let me know how it goes ๐Ÿ™‚

Leave a Comment