Creamy Salmon Piccata Recipe | foodiecrush.com


Seared salmon filets are coated in a lemony, buttery, caper-studded sauce to create the rich and creamy salmon piccata of your dreams. Skip dining out this week and make this Italian staple at home in 20 minutes flat.

Creamy Salmon Picatta on platter

Here’s a little secret about the creamy lemon-caper concoction we all know and love as piccata sauce: you can slather it over just about any protein you like.

Think outside the chicken piccata box, and submerge your favorite flaky fish in that luscious homemade piccata sauce instead.

That’s right, today we’re ditching the poultry and making salmon piccata. It’s just as fast and easy to make as traditional veal or chicken piccata, but we’re swapping in salmon filets with a gorgeous golden sear for a more unique dining experience.

Heidi’s Tips for Recipe Success

  • Normally I like to sear my proteins in a stainless steel skillet so golden flecks of flavor (called fond) can collect on the bottom of the pan. Salmon is much more tender, however, and sears best in a non-stick skillet.
  • For a bold lemon flavor, use both the juice and zest when making the piccata sauce.
  • Remove the salmon from the skillet after searing to prevent it from overcooking in the sauce. When it’s ready, nestle the salmon in the sauce and heat just until warmed through.
lemon salmon picatta recipe ingredients

What’s in This Recipe?

The full recipe, with amounts, can be found in the recipe card below.

  • Salmon filets — You can have the butcher at your local grocery store skin and cut a large filet into 4-ounce portions, or you purchase pre-portioned filets and skin them yourself.
  • Butter + olive oil — The butter adds richness and flavor, while the olive oil raises the smoke point to prevent it from burning.
  • Shallot — Has a more delicate flavor than onion, which pairs better with the flaky salmon.
  • White wine — Use a dry white wine you’d be happy to drink. If you’d rather not cook with wine, substitute with an equal amount of chicken broth.
  • Heavy cream — The high fat content in heavy cream creates a silky smooth piccata sauce that won’t curdle as it simmers.
  • Lemon — We love a bold, lemon-flavored piccata sauce so I add both the juice and zest.
  • Capers — These pickled flower buds add an essential briny pop of flavor to the lemony salmon piccata.
  • Fresh dill — Traditional chicken piccata recipes don’t call for fresh dill, but it’s the perfect pairing for salmon.
salmon seared in skillet

How to Make Salmon Piccata

  1. Season the salmon. A little kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper are all it needs.
  2. Cook until golden brown. Try to flip the salmon only once so it has time to develop a nice sear. You’ll know it’s ready to flip when the bottom is golden and the top is opaque.
creamy picatta sauce in skillets
  1. Cook the shallot, then deglaze the pan. If you diced the shallot finely, it should only need to cook for about 30 seconds in the now-empty skillet before streaming in the white wine. (Careful, it will sputter!)
  2. Add the remaining ingredients. In goes the heavy creamy, lemon juice and zest, capers, and a pinch of salt. Bring the mixture to a boil, then …
creamy picatta sauce for salmon in skillet
  1. Reduce the sauce. The lemon caper sauce needs to gently bubble away for 5 minutes. You want it to cook down by about a third.
  2. Bring it all together. Stir in the fresh dill before returning the salmon to the pan. Spoon the piccata sauce over the salmon before serving.

Heidi’s Tip: Did your sauce thicken too much? Stir in 1-2 tablespoons of water to loosen it up.

Salmon fillets topped with lemon caper piccata sauce

FAQs

How can you tell when salmon is done?

Salmon is considered done when it reaches an internal temperature of 145ºF. If you don’t own a meat thermometer, check to see if the fish is fully opaque and flakes easily with a fork.

What can I use instead of capers?

If you ran out of capers, try substituting them with finely chopped green olives.

Can the heavy cream be substituted with half and half or whole milk?

No, heavy cream is resistant to curdling thanks to its high fat content. If you use half and half or milk, you’ll wind up with a split piccata sauce.

Salmon Picatta on platter

Storage Tips

The salmon piccata with lemon caper sauce is best enjoyed right away since fish doesn’t tend to reheat well. If you wind up with leftovers, reheat them gently in a skillet over medium heat or in the microwave for 30-second bursts.

Creamy Salmon Picatta on plate with rice and asparagus

What to Serve With Salmon Piccata

If you make this recipe, please let me know! Leave a ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ rating below, leave a comment to tell us what you think, and tag me on Instagram @foodiecrush.

Creamy Salmon Picatta on plate with rice and asparagus