BOTW Salmon Meuniere

Servings: 2 Total Time: 25 mins Difficulty: Easy
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I started making BOTW Salmon Meuniere after I wanted the flavor of the original without the thin, rushed feeling a lot of copycat recipes have. My first pass was not tidy: I had one bowl too many on the counter, I tasted too early, and I had to correct the seasoning at the end. That test was useful, though, because it showed me where the recipe needed patience.

The pack title says salmon manure, but the method is clearly closer to salmon meuniere: lightly floured fish cooked in butter. I keep the spirit of the game-inspired name while cooking it like a clean, simple pan-seared salmon dinner.

I wrote this the way I actually cook it, with the small visual cues I watch for. A timer is helpful, but it cannot tell whether your pan is crowded, your cheese is melting smoothly, or your fish is cold from the refrigerator. I use the listed times, then I look, smell, and taste before I call it done.

Why I keep coming back to this

  • The ingredient list is short enough that every item has a clear job.
  • The method gives me practical checkpoints instead of asking me to guess.
  • It works for a small table without turning into a sink full of dishes.
  • The flavors are familiar, but there is still room to adjust heat, herbs, or richness.
  • Leftovers are easy to use the next day, which matters in my kitchen.
  • It feels homemade in a good way: not fussy, not bland, and not overworked.

What you need (and what each one is doing)

  • 1 4-ounce salmon steak or salmon fillet (skin on if possible).A small portion cooks quickly.
  • 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour.Flour helps the surface brown.
  • 1/4 stick unsalted butter (2 tablespoons).Butter gives meuniere flavor.
  • 1 teaspoon extra virgin olive oil.Oil helps the butter tolerate heat.
  • 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt (adjust to taste).Salt seasons the fish.
  • 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper.Pepper adds bite.
  • lettuce leaves and sliced tomatoes (for garnish).Fresh garnish lightens the plate.

How I make it

Step 1 — Dry and season

Pat salmon dry and season both sides with salt and black pepper.

Step 2 — Dust with flour

Dust lightly with flour, shaking off excess.

Step 3 — Heat the skillet

Heat butter and olive oil in a skillet over medium-high heat.

Step 4 — Crisp the skin

Cook salmon skin side down for 2-3 minutes, until crisp and golden.

Step 5 — Finish and plate

Flip and cook another 2-3 minutes, until firm but still moist. Drain briefly and serve with lettuce and tomato.

Tips from my kitchen

  • Prep before heating.I measure the small seasonings first because the cooking moves faster once the pan is hot.
  • Watch texture, not only time.I look for bubbling sauce, crisp edges, tender centers, or a glossy glaze before I stop.
  • Season in layers.A little salt early and a final taste at the end gives me more control.
  • Use the right size pan.Crowding traps steam, while a pan that is too large can dry things out.
  • Let it rest when needed.A few quiet minutes often makes slicing, serving, or saucing cleaner.

Variations I have actually tried

  • Lemon:squeeze lemon over the fish.
  • Herb butter:add parsley to the pan.
  • Different fish:use cod or halibut and adjust time.
  • No skin:cook a fillet gently and flip once.
  • Rice plate:serve with rice and cucumbers.

How I serve and store it

I serve it right away because salmon is best when the crust is still crisp. Lettuce and tomato are simple, but rice, potatoes, or green beans make it a fuller meal.

Refrigerate leftovers up to 2 days. Reheat gently in a covered skillet or eat cold over salad so the fish does not dry out.

What I learned while testing it

Dry fish browns; damp fish steams. The paper towel step seems small, but it makes the difference between crisp edges and a pale coating.

I also learned not to chase restaurant flavor by adding more of everything. Usually the better fix is a calmer one: brown the food a little more, let the sauce reduce for another minute, chill the candy fully, or taste for salt after the main ingredient has had time to absorb it.

My timing notes for a better result

I give myself a little buffer around the listed times because home kitchens vary more than recipe cards admit. A cold baking dish, a thin skillet, a crowded sheet pan, or ingredients pulled straight from the refrigerator can all change the finish by a few minutes. I keep the original timing as the roadmap, then I use the doneness signs in the steps as the final call.

For stovetop recipes, I lower the heat before I think I need to. That keeps garlic from scorching, dairy from breaking, and sugar-heavy glazes from turning sticky before the main ingredient is ready. For oven recipes, I check early but do not keep opening the door every two minutes. One careful check near the low end of the range tells me more than nervous peeking.

The serving window matters too. Crisp chicken, wings, cookies, and seared salmon are best soon after cooking. Beans, roast, cake, and candy reward patience because resting or chilling changes the texture. I plan the rest of the meal around that rhythm so the main recipe is not sitting at its worst moment while I finish a side dish.

When I cook from these notes again, I write one quick sentence on the printed page or in my phone: whether the pan was too full, whether I wanted more pepper, or whether the sauce thickened faster than expected. Those tiny notes are why the second batch is usually calmer than the first. They also keep me from changing three things at once and never knowing which change actually helped.

I keep the plating simple for the same reason. A recipe with a creamy sauce, crisp coating, glossy glaze, or tender crumb does not need a crowded plate. I would rather serve it hot, neat, and seasoned correctly than add garnishes that distract from the work already done in the pan, especially when people are already waiting.

Frequently asked questions

Can I make this ahead?

Yes. I do the prep ahead when possible, then cook or finish close to serving so the texture stays fresh.

Can I double it?

Yes, but I use a larger pan or cook in batches. Crowding is the fastest way to lose browning and crispness.

How should I reheat leftovers?

I reheat gently. Crisp recipes do better uncovered in an oven or air fryer, while creamy or saucy recipes need low heat and sometimes a splash of liquid.

Can I change the seasoning?

Yes. I make the base version once, then adjust heat, herbs, salt, or sweetness after I know how the recipe behaves.

What should I serve with it?

I pick a side that balances the dish: something crisp with creamy food, something fresh with fried food, and something starchy with saucy food.

If you make BOTW Salmon Meuniere, leave a comment with what you changed. I always like hearing which small adjustments work in other kitchens.

BOTW Salmon Meuniere

Prep Time 10 mins Cook Time 15 mins Total Time 25 mins Difficulty: Easy Servings: 2 Calories: 34 kcal Dietary:
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Description

A simple BOTW-inspired salmon meuniere with butter, olive oil, flour, salt, pepper, lettuce, and tomato.

Ingredients You’ll Need

Instructions

  1. Pat salmon dry and season both sides with salt and black pepper.
  2. Dust lightly with flour, shaking off excess.
  3. Heat butter and olive oil in a skillet over medium-high heat.
  4. Cook salmon skin side down for 2-3 minutes, until crisp and golden.
  5. Flip and cook another 2-3 minutes, until firm but still moist. Drain briefly and serve with lettuce and tomato.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 2


Amount Per Serving
Calories 34kcal
% Daily Value *
Sodium 478mg20%
Potassium 41mg2%
Total Carbohydrate 7g3%
Dietary Fiber 1g4%
Protein 1g2%

Calcium 12 mg
Iron 0.6 mg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Note

Prep first. Small measured ingredients make the cooking calmer.

Trust the cues. Use the times, but stop when the texture is right.

Taste before serving. Salt, heat, and richness are easiest to adjust at the end.

Store promptly. Cool leftovers and refrigerate within 2 hours.

Keywords: botw salmon meuniere, salmon manure, pan seared salmon, butter salmon, crispy salmon, easy fish dinner

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:
Can I make this ahead?

Yes. I do the prep ahead when possible, then cook or finish close to serving so the texture stays fresh.

Can I double it?

Yes, but I use a larger pan or cook in batches. Crowding is the fastest way to lose browning and crispness.

How should I reheat leftovers?

I reheat gently. Crisp recipes do better uncovered in an oven or air fryer, while creamy or saucy recipes need low heat and sometimes a splash of liquid.

Can I change the seasoning?

Yes. I make the base version once, then adjust heat, herbs, salt, or sweetness after I know how the recipe behaves.

What should I serve with it?

I pick a side that balances the dish: something crisp with creamy food, something fresh with fried food, and something starchy with saucy food.

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