Black Pepper Salmon With Parsley Potatoes

Updated April 1, 2026

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Ready In
1 hr
(Prep Time: 10 min; Cook Time: 50 min)
Rating
5(70)
Comments
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Fresh salmon fillets, preferably wild king salmon, are coated liberally with coarse-ground black pepper to great effect, then quickly roasted. Served with old-fashioned “parsley potatoes” and anointed with nutty brown butter, it’s a pleasingly simple dish.

Featured in: A Salmon and Potato Recipe That Only Feels Fancy

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Ingredients

Yield:4 servings
  • 2 pounds small, round potatoes 

  • Salt

  • 4 (6-ounce) salmon fillets, skin off

  • 1 tablespoon coarse-ground black pepper

  • 6 tablespoons salted butter

  • 1 lemon, cut into wedges

  • 3 tablespoons roughly chopped flat-leaf parsley

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Put potatoes in a pot of well-salted water. Bring to a boil, then simmer briskly until tender when probed with a skewer, fork or paring knife, 15 to 20 minutes. Drain and let cool slightly. While potatoes are still warm, remove skins with a paring knife (this goes faster if two people do it; otherwise, it’s a meditative chore for one). Return peeled potatoes to pot, cover and keep warm.

  2. Step 2

    Heat oven to 400 degrees. 

  3. Step 3

    Meanwhile, lay salmon flat in a shallow roasting pan or on a rimmed baking sheet. Season with salt on both sides, and generously sprinkle the pieces with about ½ teaspoon pepper on each side. Leave to absorb seasoning, at least 10 minutes or up to 1 hour, at room temperature. 

  4. Step 4

    Put salmon in the oven. Cook until white juices appear on surface and fish begins to flake when poked with a fingertip or fork, 10 to 15 minutes, taking care not to overcook

  5. Step 5

    As the salmon bakes, add 2 tablespoons butter, a good pinch of salt and ½ cup water to the pot of potatoes. Set pot over medium-high heat until potatoes are hot, 2 to 3 minutes. Leave in pot.

  6. Step 6

    Set a small skillet over medium-high heat. Cut remaining 4 tablespoons butter into chunks and add to pan. Swirl pan and cook until butter begins to foam and brown, about 2 minutes. Squeeze a little bit of juice from 1 lemon wedge over the butter and turn off heat.

  7. Step 7

    Add parsley to potatoes, toss gently to coat, and transfer to a warm serving dish.

  8. Step 8

    Transfer salmon to a platter or individual plates. Spoon brown butter over fish. Serve with remaining lemon wedges.

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Ratings

5 out of 5
70 user ratings
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Comments

Leave the skins on the potatoes!

There are so many benefits to leaving the skin on the potatoes.

If you want the peeled-potato texture for this dish, you can still eat the skins as a snack by letting them dry a bit, tossing them with oil and salt (and powdered garlic and/or whatever spice blend you fancy) and roasting them until crispy. I like them hot, and I like them cold, and I like them tossed into a salad instead of croutons.

Nice but nothing special. I cook almost any type of fish like this regularly and roast some veggie or another on the same sheet pan. (Veggies about 10 minutes before added fish to the pan). If fish makes

Excellent recipe! Followed as directed but only had yukon gold so I halved and quartered them. Also paired with asparagus salad, and I'll definitely do it again and make the strawberry tart, just didn't have the energy today. Kids enjoyed it which was a pleasant surprise and such a lovely spring dinner!

Very good recipe. I only made some small changes. I left the skin on the potatoes but chopped them in half so that the butter could still work it's way deep into each potato half. I also left the skin on the fish because I love it. You will want to spoon the butter sauce from the potatoes on to the salmon sooner rather than later. If you wait too long, the potatoes will soak it all up leaving your salmon sauceless. #firstworldproblems

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