Salmon Cakes with a Crunch

Salmon Cakes with a Crunch

By Tiffany Haugen

Fresh fish is always the best but what do you do when you have a surplus? Smoking, canning and freezing are all great options but all yield very different end results

This version, made with canned salmon and coated with panko (Japanese bread crumbs) before frying, makes a great appetizer for holiday gatherings. Cooked or canned tuna, steelhead or trout can be substituted for salmon in this recipe. To amp-up the flavor of these cakes, additional seasonings and/or herbs, even crushed potato chips, can be added to the panko coating.

salmon cakes

Salmon Cakes With a Crunch

Ingredients:

2 cups cooked salmon (or steelhead, trout, tuna)

1/4 cup panko

1/4 cup chives

1/4 cup mayonnaise

2 tablespoons soy sauce

1 tablespoon lemon juice

1 teaspoon minced garlic

1 cup panko for coating

1/4 cup peanut or coconut oil for frying

Directions:

Remove any bones from fish.

In a medium bowl, gently mix all ingredients until combined. Do not over mix.

If desired, mix additional ingredients into 1 cup panko.

Place panko on a plate. 

Form into cakes; bite-sized (make 10-12), cake-sized (make 6-8), patty-sized (make 4).

Press each cake into panko, coating on both sides.

Heat oil in a skillet over medium-high heat.

Fry 2-4 minutes until golden and carefully flip, browning on the other side.

Serve immediately with your favorite dipping sauce.

salmon cakes fish

What else to do with my cooked/canned fish?

With those monster catches, the canner always comes out. Canning fish, be it salmon, steelhead, tuna or even trout, cooks the fish to perfection, producing a shelf-stable, ready-to-use protein option that can be added to many dishes. Smoking fish is also a great way to preserve fish under refrigeration for several days and it can also be canned and/or frozen. Freezing raw fish gives more flexibility with cooking methods but fish shouldn’t be frozen longer than 6-8 months.

Keep in mind, fresh fish does cook up differently than its preserved counterpart. The key is finding recipes to use with fish that will enhance flavors and textures. Our family enjoys many types of fish cakes as they can be cooked up as an appetizer or made into a patty and served on a bun.

•Stir into a creamy pasta dish.

•Toss into a pasta salad.

•Add to chowder.

•Make a creamy dip or pate.

•Put in a wrap.

•Bake into a casserole.

•Use in a quiche or frittata.

Get More Recipes Like This:

cooking seafood

 

Back to blog

Leave a comment

Please note, comments need to be approved before they are published.