This Sesame Glazed Salmon with Green Beans is another one of those “faster than take-out” dishes. It’s incredibly simple, plus OMG it looks spectacular. Right? Look how fancy!
If you’re looking for a “date night” dish, this is probably it. It’s fast and totally uncomplicated, so you can stay focused on what your date is saying, rather than what’s happening in the pan. Grab a bottle of crisp white wine and it will be a memorable evening, for sure.
How to Serve Sesame Glazed Salmon
This recipe includes a super simple sesame marinade, which doubles as a glaze, fresh salmon filets, and green beans that are perfectly cooked until bright green and slightly tender. I served mine with jasmine rice just to round out the meal, but the glazed green beans make a pretty bed for the salmon if you want to reduce the carbs a bit.
What is Rice Wine?
Rice wine is literally wine made from rice. When wine is allowed to continue to ferment, it eventually produces vinegar. So, rice wine is a precursor to rice vinegar. It has a much more mild and sweet flavor than rice vinegar. It was my full intention to use rice vinegar in the marinade, but I discovered that I was out, so I subbed in some rice wine (not rice wine vinegar) that I had in the back of my pantry. I actually liked the rice wine much better. It made the glaze mild and sweet, instead of bold and tangy. Many popular supermarket brands, like Kikkoman and Ka-me, make rice wine, so hopefully, you can find it in major supermarkets. If you can’t find it, you can use rice vinegar, but I’d reduce the amount to 1.5 Tbsp, and just know that it will be a much tangier glaze.
Sesame Glazed Salmon and Green Beans
Ingredients
- 2/3 lb. salmon filet ($6.59)
- 2/3 lb. fresh green beans ($0.80)
MARINADE/GLAZE
- 3 Tbsp soy sauce ( $0.30)
- 1 Tbsp water ($0.00)
- 2 Tbsp rice wine (mirin) ($0.27)
- 2 Tbsp brown sugar ($0.04)
- 1/2 Tbsp toasted sesame oil ($0.85)
- 1 clove garlic, minced ($0.08)
- 1 inch fresh ginger, grated or minced ($0.11)
- 1 Tbsp sesame seeds ($0.15)
- 1 Tbsp cornstarch ($0.04)
Instructions
- In a small bowl, combine the soy sauce, water, rice wine, brown sugar, sesame oil, garlic, ginger, sesame seeds, and cornstarch. Stir until the cornstarch is dissolved.
- Remove the scales and/or skin from the salmon, if needed. Cut the salmon into three equal sized pieces and place them in a quart-sized zip top bag. Add about half of the marinade to the bag and let the fish marinate for about 15 minutes. Save the second half of the marinade for later.
- While the fish is marinating, snap the stems off the beans and break any long beans in half. Rinse the beans in a colander. Add the beans to a medium sauce pot, cover with water, add a lid, and bring to a boil over high heat. Allow the beans to boil until bright green and slightly tender (about 3 minutes), then drain in the colander and set aside.
- Lightly mist a non-stick skillet with non-stick spray and heat over medium-low flame. Once hot, add the salmon pieces and cook on each side until the glaze turns deep brown and the fish is cooked through (about 3-5 minutes each side). Removed the cooked salmon to a clean plate.
- Add the drained green beans to the skillet that was used to cook the salmon, along with the remaining unused marinade. Sauté the green beans in the marinade until it thickens to a shiny glaze and completely coats the green beans (about 3 minutes). Serve the fish on top of the glazed green beans.
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Notes
Nutrition
How to Make Sesame Glazed Salmon – Step by Step Photos
Begin by mixing together the marinade, which will also be used as a glaze. Mince a clove of garlic and grate or mince about 1 inch of fresh ginger (here’s a tutorial on how to work with fresh ginger). In a small bowl combine 3 Tbsp soy sauce, 1 Tbsp water, 2, Tbsp brown sugar, 2 Tbsp rice wine (mirin), 1/2 Tbsp toasted sesame oil, minced garlic, grated ginger, 1 Tbsp sesame seeds, and 1 Tbsp cornstarch. Stir everything together until the cornstarch has dissolved.
If your salmon still has the skin and scales on it, you have two choices: remove the scales and cook it with the skin on, or remove both the skin and scales. To remove the scales, use a large knife to carefully scrape backward against the scales until they all come off (this can be a bit messy). To remove the skin and scales, carefully slide a sharp knife between the skin and the flesh. Once the skin and/or scales are removed, cut the salmon into three equal-sized pieces (this recipe could easily handle four servings of salmon and beans, if needed).
Add the salmon pieces and about half of the marinade to a zip-top bag, and let the fish marinate for about 15 minutes.
Meanwhile, snap the stems off the green beans and break any long beans in half. Rinse the beans briefly in a colander, then add to a medium sauce pot and cover with water. Place a lid on the pot and bring it up to a boil over high heat. Let the beans boil just until they’re bright green and slightly tender (about 3 minutes).
Drain the cooked green beans in a colander.
This is one of the few instances where I think it’s best to use a non-stick skillet. Glazes that contain sugar just looooove to stick to metal skillets. I even added a bit of non-stick spray for extra safety. Heat the skillet over medium-low heat. Once hot, add the salmon pieces and cook on each side until the glaze is browned. If you look in the photo you can see how the fish is turning kind of whiteish and opaque near where it’s in contact with the skillet. Watch the fish change color and flip it when that opaque color is about 1/3 the way up the fish. The second side will cook slightly faster, so you’ll want to flip it before the opaque color gets halfway up the filet. Once the whole filet is opaque all the way through, the fish is done.
It really only takes about 5 minutes to cook the fish through and get the glaze nice and brown. Of course, this will depend on the heat of your flame and how thin the skillet is. My non-stick skillet is quite a bit thinner than my regular stainless steel set, so I set my flame a tad lower to prevent scorching or cooking the outside of the fish too fast.
Remove the cooked fish to a clean plate, then add the drained green beans to the skillet. Pour the remaining, unused portion of the marinade over the green beans.
Sauté the green beans in the glaze until the glaze thickens and turns transparent. The beans should be fully coated in the glaze.
Place the salmon back on top of the green beans and serve.
Sesame Glazed Salmon and Green Beans #winning
This was the bomb!! Yesterday I made the easy sesame chicken and the salmon today. Think I might try using shrimp tomorrow.
I’m having a secret live affair with sesame oil โฅ๏ธโฅ๏ธ
Just made this. Will be my go to salmon recipe from now on. Kids loved it. The glaze is just delicious. Thanks!
This was easy and super tasty! I used rice wine vinegar since that was all I had and it still tasted awesome, a lil sweet. Definitely a winner.
Made this recipe as a packed lunch and it turned out amazing! I used rice vinegar rather than rice wine but the flavour of the salmon was still absolutely delicious. Thank you for your simple and straightforward recipes; the step by step photos are especially useful for a beginner cook like me!
I have never cooked fish or had salmon outside of sushi.. is it really juicy? I hated the tuna I recently tried because of how juicy it was, and I don’t eat other meat, so subbing isn’t an option.
Hmm, I’m not sure I’ve ever had fish that was juicy. If you cook it longer it will be come more dry and flakey, although most people don’t like fish that way.
Best salmon I’ve made! I didn’t make it with the green beans. I cooked the extra sauce afterwards then poured it over the salmon.
Do you think this would work with other firm fish? Like cod filets?
Probably, although I think the flavor of salmon goes much better with the sauce.
This blog never fails, this was delicious.
I love the unmentioned hotsauce addition to almost all recipes too.
๐ข I did not have much success trying to make this recipe. My salmon did not have that nice brown glaze even after I cooked it longer. It ended up tasting over cooked and completely bland. It just was pale and the marinade fell off and cooked on the pan. On the plus side, my green beans tasted great.
Your pan probably wasn’t hot enough.ย
This recipe was so amazingly easy and delicious! I ended up using substituting cooking sherry for the mirin since my supermarket didn’t have any mirin but I wanted the sweetness as opposed to the rice vinegar. It worked like a charm!
I also reduced the sesame oil to 1 tsp (I’m on Weight Watchers and this lowered the recipe by a point.) FYI for Weight Watchers folks, this recipe using cooking sherry instead of mirin and only using 1 tsp of sesame oil is 8 smart points per serving (3 servings total).
Hi there,
Is there alternatives to cornstarch, that you would recommend for this recipe.
Thanks,
Ash
Some people use arrow root as a thickener, but I’ve never used that.
Made this as a movie night treat for myself and my daughter. She loves helping in the kitchen and this was easy and delicious! Thanks Beth!
I made this last night but used tuna steaks instead of salmon. I think it would have been better with salmon. The sauce was pretty good and we liked the green beans.
this was super delicious and much easier than i thought it would be. definitely going to be making it again!
This recipe is so easy and has great flavour. This will be my go to recipe for Salmon. I am going to try it with chicken.
Two of my favourite flavours, ginger and sesame. Thank you for Sharing. Sam of Stouffville, Ontario ๐จ๐ฆ๐โ