Recipe courtesy of Donald Neff

Odyssey's Mustard Crusted Side of Salmon

  • Level: Intermediate
  • Yield: 6 to 8 servings
  • Total: 35 min
  • Prep: 25 min
  • Cook: 10 min
Advertisement

Ingredients

1 pound butter

1/4 cup minced garlic

1 cup whole grain mustard

1/4 cup chopped fresh thyme

2 lemons, juiced

2 tablespoons Old Bay seasoning

2 tablespoons salt

2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper

3 cups panko bread crumbs (Japanese bread crumbs) Do not substitute regular bread crumbs

1 (3 to 4 pound) side of salmon, skin on, pin bones removed

Directions

  1. Whip butter with an electric mixer until fluffy. Add the garlic, mustard, thyme, lemon juice, Old Bay, salt, pepper, and panko, and mix well. Line a small sheet pan with parchment paper or waxed paper and lay salmon, skin side down, on pan. Blot salmon with paper towels to remove any moisture. "Crust" the salmon while the butter is still soft, allowing a 1/4-inch crust. At this point, the salmon may be refrigerated (cover with plastic wrap after butter has hardened).
  2. Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F.
  3. Bake for approximately 10 minutes for a still slightly pink fish. Use 2 long flat spatulas, coming in from either end, to lift the salmon off the paper and transfer to a serving platter.

Cook’s Note

Use your imagination, substitute dill for the thyme, horseradish for the mustard, substitute crushed potato chips for the Panko (try different flavors of chips or use pretzels or tortilla chips). This dish can also be prepared for individual portions.

Let's Get Cooking!

Sign up for the Recipe of the Day newsletter to receive editor-picked recipes,tips and videos delivered to your inbox daily. Privacy Policy

Thanks for subscribing to the Recipe of the Day newsletter. Check out all our other great newsletters from Easy Recipes, Healthy Eating Ideas and Chef Recipe Videos.

We're sorry, there was an error signing you up. Please try again later.

Advertisement

Susan N.

Mushy and way too oily -- the panko absorbs the butter and I pared it down 1/4th! Ruins the health factor of the fish with the butter. Fish came out moist and delicious as baked salmon usually is. The topping flavor was there. The texture was gross as was the color. The topping is brown. I could not imagine this recipe with 4 sticks of butter - that's a deep fried butter salmon. I'll use the technique though and swap out with the mentioned crunchier sturdier dryer toppings like pretzels....and also swap out the butter for a bit of flavored oil. I'll keep trying to work it out till it's just as tasty, but with a very crunchy crusty crust, moist salmon underneath ~ and no adding of saturated fat.

See All Reviews