Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a meat thermometer so you know when to take it out of the oven.
I roast mine with salt, pepper and olive oil — 425* until the internal temp is 120-125*. Sometimes I brush it with a homemade teriyaki sauce before roasting.
ZOMG. That's unsafe. 165F minimum. /s
OMG 165 they will be as dry as cardboard and tasteless!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a meat thermometer so you know when to take it out of the oven.
I roast mine with salt, pepper and olive oil — 425* until the internal temp is 120-125*. Sometimes I brush it with a homemade teriyaki sauce before roasting.
ZOMG. That's unsafe. 165F minimum. /s
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a meat thermometer so you know when to take it out of the oven.
I roast mine with salt, pepper and olive oil — 425* until the internal temp is 120-125*. Sometimes I brush it with a homemade teriyaki sauce before roasting.
ZOMG. That's unsafe. 165F minimum. /s
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a meat thermometer so you know when to take it out of the oven.
I roast mine with salt, pepper and olive oil — 425* until the internal temp is 120-125*. Sometimes I brush it with a homemade teriyaki sauce before roasting.
ZOMG. That's unsafe. 165F minimum. /s
Anonymous wrote:Remove skin when serving
Anonymous wrote:Get a meat thermometer so you know when to take it out of the oven.
I roast mine with salt, pepper and olive oil — 425* until the internal temp is 120-125*. Sometimes I brush it with a homemade teriyaki sauce before roasting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Salmon is nasty. But the posters in the Food Forum LOVE it for some reason.
Salmon is most certainly not nasty, you dimwit. It's fine if you don't like it, but most people do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I brush it with olive oil, season it with salt and pepper, and then roast it in the oven at 400 degrees for 18-20 minutes. I like it cooked all the way through but not dry, and that usually does the trick.
This, but we top with a seasoning called Feisty Fish. Make sure you’re buying a good cut. We like responsibly farm raised from Norway.
Anonymous wrote:I'm the pp who laid out the two methods, I read some other posts and wanted to add a couple things
I talked about albumen like you know what it is. Whenever salmon starts to leech a white substance, you have overcooked it, that white substance is called albumen, it is a protein that is excreted when the fish is cooked.
I agree with other posters that you should always cook salmon the day you buy it. The fresher the better.
And don't be too hard on yourself for pan frying, pan frying skin on fish is a significant cooking skill that requires practice. I messed up quite a few fish before I could do it. Same with grilling (a way I love salmon). Don't take failures as total discouraging events, cooking is a skill that has to be learned. And you would never expect someone to some out and be shooting three pointers immediately at basketball.