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Ingredients
1 tablespoon store-bought or homemade ssamjang, plus more for serving
2 teaspoons rice vinegar
1 pound skin-on salmon, cut into 1-inch cubes and pat dry
Red or green leaf lettuce, for serving
Rice, for serving
Thinly sliced cucumbers, radishes, and garlic, or kimchi (all optional), for serving
Preparation
- Step 1
When you’re ready to cook, arrange a rack about 6 inches from the broiler and heat broiler to high. In a medium bowl, stir together the ssamjang and rice vinegar. Add the salmon and stir to coat. On a foil-lined sheet pan, arrange the salmon pieces skin-side-up. (You can marinate the salmon at room temperature for up to 30 minutes.)
- Step 2
Broil the salmon until the skin is crisp and the meat is opaque, 4 to 7 minutes. Check every minute or so and if any pieces are burning, push them onto another side.
- Step 3
Eat the salmon in lettuce wraps with a spoonful of rice and dab of ssamjang, plus any other toppings you like.
Private Notes
Comments
I made the ssamjang from scratch, and boy, was it good*! As was the entire dish. For so little effort, it was an impressive hit for my dinner guests. I expect it would also be terrific subbing shrimp for salmon . . . Served it with Eric Kim's miso soup, which also got rave reviews from my guests. *so good, in fact, I'll be making another batch to keep in the frig.
Used the air fryer 400F for 8 minutes. Great easy recipe
so simple. so satisfying. so ssamjang.
Broiled on 2nd rack for 4 minutes and skin burned. Next time will bake or air fry per other comments.
We enjoyed this very much. When we watched the video, there was a flat circular thing on the lettuce that the salmon and rice, etc were placed on. There was no mention of that in the recipe? Seems like that would make eating this recipe easier. Anyone know what it is? Rice paper or something?
So simple and fast to make. I baked the salmon at 375 for 10 minutes because I don’t have a broiler and it was perfect. You can really decorate your lettuce wraps with condiments, too, which is fun — furikake, sriracha mayo, soy sauce, etc — in addition to the ssamjang
