There are a number of ways to smoke salmon. You may be familiar with the fully cured smoked salmon, like lox, that you find on bagels or cured platters. It’s dense, often salty and fully cured and safe to eat without cooking with heat. There is also the option of hot smoking fresh salmon with little more than seasoning on the surface of the fish to affect the final product. This recipe, however, lives somewhere in between. By giving the salmon a quick cure, you can force flavors into the flesh while pulling some water out and concentrating the flavors. The fish is not fully cured, so we finish it on the grill, which imparts smoke flavor and makes the fish safe to eat. The end product is flavorful, tender, juicy and quite versatile. Partially cured Hot Smoked Salmon is great served hot off the grill or cooled and eaten on salads, sandwiches or as a snack.
Hot Smoked Salmon
•
Tom Jackson
Like this kind of content?
Become an ATBBQ Insider to receive exclusive communications about Promotions, Sales, and Events!
You might also enjoy
Smoked Pork Green Chili Recipe
Why You’ll Love This Recipe This smoked pork green chile combines tender chunks of pork shoulder with fire-roasted Hatch chiles,...
Championship Chicken Thighs Recipe
If you're searching for the best smoked chicken thighs recipe, look no further than these award-winning Championship Chicken Thighs. This...
Perfect Grilled Chicken Wings
If you're looking for the ultimate grilled chicken wings recipe that's easy, delicious, and guaranteed to please a crowd, you've...
The Western Smash Burger
Fire up the Yoder Smokers YS640s and smash your way to burger bliss with double patties, beer‑battered onion strings, jalapeños, and smoky...
Bacon Wrapped Dogs
Smoky bacon, spicy jalapeño cheddar sausages, and a zesty dill-pickle mayo sauce make these Bacon Wrapped Dogs the undisputed star...
Alabama White Smash Burgers
Crispy, cheesy, and dripping with tangy Alabama White Sauce, these smash burgers are packed with Southern-style flavor. Made on the...