Go Back

Tea Smoked Salmon

This lightly cured and smoked Salmon can be used as shown here for a first course, or with different accompaniments as a main course. It would make a fabulous tea sandwich, breakfast or canapé as well! The recipe may be scaled up without problem. If scaling up, portion the salmon before you begin the smoking process. Chef Foos is using a commercial smoker here. If you are using a stovetop hotel pan, you will use one smoking pile instead of one over each burner. Place the salmon on the rack away from the burner that will be used to ignite the tea leaves and wood chips. As soon as the smoke is steady, cover the hotel pan and turn the flame down as low as possible to just keep the leaves smoldering.
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Total Time 2 hours 20 minutes
Course Appetizer, Salad, Side Dish, Small Bites, Snack, Starter
Cuisine American, Fish, International, Mediterranean
Servings 1 first course portions
Calories 120 kcal

Equipment

  • 1 Hotel pan
  • 1 Smoker set up
  • Heavy duty aluminum foil

Ingredients
  

  • 200 grams King Salmon
  • 84 grams sugar
  • 42 grams salt kosher or sea salt
  • 20 grams jasmine tea dry leaf, divided
  • 5 grams bay leaves
  • 3 grams pink peppercorns
  • woodchips

Instructions
 

  • Clean salmon and check for any remaining bones, set aside
  • Set aside half of the jasmine leaves for the smoking mixture. Combine half the jasmine and remaining ingredients together and grind in a food processor.
  • Cover the salmon in the cure and refrigerate for up to two hours
  • Portion the salmon if needed
  • Set the smoker to 110 deg F, and add dampened tea leaves and an equal volume of wood chips.
  • Smoke for 15 minutes.
  • The lightly cured and smoked salmon is shown as plated by Chef Foos with fresh pickled rhubarb, cucumber and meiwa.
Keyword Cured Salmon, Smoked Salmon, Tea