Marinated Salmon on Toothpicks
Updated Jan. 30, 2023

- Total Time
- 40 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ¾pound salmon fillet, skin and small bones removed
- Salt
- Freshly ground pepper
- 1tablespoon soy sauce
- 2tablespoons rice vinegar
- 1tablespoon mirin
- 2tablespoons sesame oil
- 2teaspoons grated or finely chopped fresh ginger
- 1ripe but firm avocado
Preparation
- Step 1
Remove all of the pin bones from the salmon, and cut into ½-inch cubes. Place in a bowl, and season with salt and pepper. Toss with the soy sauce, rice vinegar, mirin, sesame oil and ginger. Cover and marinate in the refrigerator for about 30 minutes.
- Step 2
Cut the avocado into ½-inch cubes, and place in a bowl. Pour some of the marinade from the salmon into the bowl, and toss gently. Thread two pieces of salmon and one avocado cube onto each toothpick. Arrange on a platter and serve.
- Advance preparation: You can thread the salmon onto the toothpicks an hour before serving, but wait to add the avocado until shortly before serving so that it doesn’t discolor.
Private Notes
Comments
Does this have to be sushi grade salmon or does the curing do enough sterilization? thanks! Karen.
The term “sushi grade” actually means the fish has bee frozen for a short while, which does kill some of the potential bad parasites or microbes. I dont know all that it kills but it’s good, when eating raw fish, that it is sushi grade. Since this recipe calls for only small amount of acids unlike a ceviche, I would stick with sushi grade tuna.
This was a huge hit at a dinner party, even though the piece of salmon I was using was pretty thin, and some of the pieces weren't chunky enough to look like the photo. I just double-skewered those pieces, and they stayed on the toothpicks just fine. I used Skuna Bay salmon from the Vancouver area.
Does anyone know how many skewers in a serving? The nutrition information says 12 servings but that's vague...
The term “sushi grade” actually means the fish has bee frozen for a short while, which does kill some of the potential bad parasites or microbes. I dont know all that it kills but it’s good, when eating raw fish, that it is sushi grade. Since this recipe calls for only small amount of acids unlike a ceviche, I would stick with sushi grade tuna.
Ginger tastes like soap to me (cilantro too, I have that gene I guess). Typically I can skip the ginger in a recipe and things still work, but this recipe is so unadulterated I wonder if it would change it too much to leave it out. Any thoughts from those that know ginger?