Salmon Marinades and Glazes: Formulas, Ratios and Timing

Last reviewed on 7 May 2026

Once you have cooked salmon a few times, the next thing most cooks want is to stop following marinade recipes word-for-word and start improvising with what is in the cupboard. The cupboard usually has more than enough; what tends to be missing is a sense of the underlying ratios. This guide gives those ratios, explains why each part is there, and covers the timing rules that keep marinades from turning the fish mushy and glazes from turning the surface to charcoal.

For the cooking itself, see how to cook salmon to the right doneness. For finished recipes that put these ideas into practice, the miso, grilled and baked categories are good starting points.

Marinade vs glaze: not the same job

The two terms get used loosely, but they do different work. A marinade is a flavoured liquid the salmon sits in before cooking, with the goal of seasoning the surface and (a little) the layer just under it. A glaze is a thicker, sweeter mixture brushed on during or after cooking that bonds to the surface and caramelises. A marinade is mostly salt and acid; a glaze is mostly sugar and salt. Some recipes treat one as both — a teriyaki sauce, for example, can marinate the fish briefly and then be reduced into a glaze — but the ratio shifts depending on the role.

The basic salmon marinade formula

A useful base ratio for a salmon marinade, by volume, for two to four fillets:

For a typical four-fillet dinner, that translates to roughly 3 tablespoons oil, 1 tablespoon acid, 1 tablespoon soy or equivalent, plus the aromatics. The fat carries fat-soluble flavour (chilli, citrus zest, herbs) into the surface; the acid brightens; the salt-and-savoury element seasons through. Slide any of the three components up or down a notch and the marinade will still work — slide one to zero and it usually will not.

Why the ratio is fat-heavy

It seems counter-intuitive on a fatty fish, but the oil does two things acid and salt cannot: it dissolves and distributes flavour compounds that water rejects (think the chilli oils and garlic-derived sulphides), and it creates a thin surface coat that helps the fish brown rather than steam in the pan or oven. Reduce the oil and the marinade still seasons, but the surface goes pale.

Marinating times: shorter than you think

Salmon flesh is far more delicate than chicken or beef. Long marinating times do not season more deeply; they break the proteins down with acid until the surface turns mushy.

The basic salmon glaze formula

A glaze is built around a sweet element that will caramelise on the surface, plus salt and umami to keep it from being one-note. A workable starting ratio, by volume:

For four fillets, that is roughly 2 tablespoons each of sweetener and savoury liquid, 1 tablespoon acid, 1 tablespoon aromatic. Whisk together, taste, adjust toward whichever pole the recipe needs. A teriyaki glaze leans soy-and-mirin; a maple glaze leans sweetener-and-mustard; a miso glaze swaps in white miso for some of the soy. The frame is the same.

Stopping a glaze from burning

Sweet glazes scorch fast. Three reliable ways to keep them on the fish:

  1. Glaze late, not early. Cook the fillet most of the way through naked, then brush the glaze on for the final 2–4 minutes. Under a hot broiler or air-fryer, even less.
  2. Reduce the glaze separately first. Simmer it in a small saucepan for two or three minutes until it coats the back of a spoon, then brush. Half the work is already done before it meets the heat.
  3. Drop the temperature. If a recipe says broil, try the top rack at 400°F instead. The Maillard browning still happens; the burning slows down.

A few sample combinations

These are starting points, not strict recipes. Each follows the formulas above. Adjust to taste.

Common mistakes

Where to use these next

Once a marinade or glaze tastes right on the spoon, the cooking method usually decides itself: thinner, brighter marinades for grilling and air-frying, thicker glazes for baking and broiling. For a side that complements whichever you have built, see what to serve with salmon; for the temperature targets the fish should hit underneath, see how to cook salmon to the right doneness.