teriyaki salmon rice bowl

Teriyaki Salmon Rice Bowl


A teriyaki salmon rice bowl is the weeknight dinner that looks like it required planning and takes 25 minutes with ingredients most people either have or can grab in one grocery store aisle. Salmon seared in a skillet with a homemade teriyaki glaze — soy sauce, honey, garlic, ginger, rice vinegar, sesame oil — served over rice with edamame, sliced cucumber, avocado, and a sriracha mayo drizzle. It’s the cooked sushi bowl concept, executed in a skillet, without the raw fish anxiety or the restaurant markup.

Most teriyaki salmon bowl recipes require either a 20-to-30-minute marinade or an oven. This version does neither. The glaze goes into the pan in the last 60 seconds of cooking, hits the hot pan, and caramelizes directly onto the salmon surface while it’s still on the heat. No waiting, no oven preheating, same result.

A hot skillet over medium-high heat does something an oven can’t: it creates a crispy, caramelized crust on the skin side of the salmon while the flesh cooks gently from the heat above. The skin-side-down sear for 4 to 5 minutes without moving the fillet is what produces the textural contrast between crispy skin and tender flesh. The oven produces even cooking throughout, which is fine, but it doesn’t produce crispy salmon skin.

The second advantage of the skillet is control. An oven runs at a fixed temperature for a fixed time. A skillet lets you watch the salmon cook from the side and judge doneness by sight — when the pink has climbed about two-thirds of the way up the fillet from the bottom and the flesh flakes with slight pressure, it’s done. Pull it, flip it, add the glaze, 60 seconds, done.

Soy sauce, honey, rice vinegar, sesame oil, fresh garlic, and fresh ginger — whisked together in a small bowl before the salmon goes in. That’s the full recipe for the glaze. The rice vinegar is the ingredient most store-bought teriyaki sauces skip, and it’s the one that keeps the honey from being cloying — the acid cuts through the sweetness and gives the glaze a brightness that makes it taste like more than just sweet soy. The fresh ginger adds an aromatic warmth that ground ginger can’t replicate.

Half the glaze goes into the pan during the last 60 seconds of cooking. The other half gets drizzled over the assembled bowls at serving time. Two jobs, one sauce, no extra steps.

Rice on the bottom. Salmon on top. Edamame, cucumber, and sliced avocado arranged alongside. Remaining teriyaki glaze drizzled over everything. Sriracha mayo in a zigzag. Sliced green onion and toasted sesame seeds scattered on top. The bowl looks like it took thought — it took 3 minutes of assembly once the salmon was done.

The sriracha mayo is 3 tablespoons of mayo and 1.5 tablespoons of sriracha, stirred together. That’s it. It cuts through the richness of the salmon and the sweetness of the teriyaki and adds the creamy heat element that makes the bowl complete.

This is a complete meal. Nothing else needed. For other salmon recipes to rotate through the week, the Cajun Air Fryer Salmon and Honey Sriracha Salmon cover the same protein in completely different flavor directions.

Keep the components separate if you’re meal prepping. The salmon keeps for 2 days and reheats well in a 300°F oven for 8 minutes. The rice holds for 4 days. Assemble fresh bowls rather than storing assembled — the avocado browns, the cucumber goes soft, and the rice absorbs the sauce. Store the sriracha mayo in the fridge for up to a week; it works as a dipping sauce for everything.

teriyaki salmon rice bowl

Teriyaki Salmon Rice Bowl

Salmon fillets glazed in a quick homemade teriyaki sauce — soy, honey, garlic, ginger, and rice vinegar — seared in a skillet until caramelized, then served over rice with edamame, cucumber, sliced avocado, and a sriracha mayo drizzle. No marinating, no oven. Done in 25 minutes.
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 25 minutes
Course Main Course
Cuisine American, Japanese
Servings 4 servings

Ingredients
  

Meat & Protein

  • 4 salmon fillets 6 oz each, skin-on, patted dry

Produce

  • 1 avocado sliced
  • 1 cucumber halved lengthwise and sliced into half-moons
  • 3 green onion thinly sliced, for garnish
  • 1 fresh ginger grated — about 1 tsp
  • 2 garlic cloves minced

Dairy

Pantry & Canned Goods

  • 2 cups long grain white rice uncooked — or use pre-cooked rice pouches
  • 1 cup edamame frozen, shelled — thawed
  • 3 tbsp soy sauce low sodium
  • 2 tbsp honey
  • 1 tbsp rice vinegar
  • 1 tbsp sesame oil
  • 3 tbsp mayonnaise Hellmanns or Dukes recommended — for sriracha mayo
  • 1.5 tbsp sriracha adjust to heat preference — for sriracha mayo
  • 1 tbsp olive oil for searing salmon
  • 1 tbsp sesame seeds toasted, for garnish

Seasonings & Spices

  • ¼ tsp kosher salt for salmon
  • ¼ tsp black pepper for salmon

Instructions
 

  • Cook the rice according to package directions. While the rice cooks, prepare everything else — this is a 25-minute meal when the rice runs simultaneously.
  • Make the teriyaki glaze: whisk together the soy sauce, honey, rice vinegar, sesame oil, minced garlic, and grated ginger in a small bowl until combined. Set aside — this is both the glaze and the finishing sauce.
  • Make the sriracha mayo: stir together the mayonnaise and sriracha in a small bowl until smooth. Refrigerate until serving.
  • Pat the salmon fillets completely dry with paper towels. Season the flesh side with kosher salt and black pepper. Dry salmon is the key to a proper sear — any moisture on the surface causes steaming instead of caramelization.
  • Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat until shimmering. Place the salmon fillets skin-side down. Cook without moving for 4 to 5 minutes until the skin is crispy and the salmon is cooked about two-thirds of the way up the side. Flip carefully and cook for 2 minutes on the flesh side.
  • Pour half the teriyaki glaze into the pan. It will immediately bubble and begin to caramelize. Spoon the glaze over the flesh side of each fillet as it thickens — about 60 seconds. The glaze should be glossy and sticky. Remove from heat.
  • Assemble the bowls: divide the rice among four bowls. Place one salmon fillet in each bowl. Arrange the edamame, cucumber slices, and avocado alongside. Drizzle the remaining teriyaki glaze over everything. Add the sriracha mayo in a zigzag. Garnish with sliced green onion, toasted sesame seeds, and serve immediately.

Notes

No marinating required. The teriyaki glaze goes into the pan during the last 60 seconds of cooking — the high heat caramelizes it onto the surface of the salmon without any wait time. The result is as flavorful as a long marinated version without the planning ahead.
Skin-side down first and don’t move it. The skin needs 4 to 5 uninterrupted minutes against the hot pan to render and crisp. Moving the salmon causes it to stick and the skin tears. Let the pan do the work and the salmon will release cleanly when it’s ready to flip.
Start the rice first — it takes 18 to 20 minutes and the salmon takes 7 to 8. Getting the rice going first means everything finishes at the same time. Pre-cooked rice pouches cut this to a true 15-minute dinner.
The remaining teriyaki glaze doubles as the bowl sauce. Pour it directly over the assembled bowls — it coats the rice, the cucumber, and the edamame and ties the whole bowl together.
Leftovers: keep components separate. The salmon keeps for 2 days in the fridge and reheats well in a 300°F oven for 8 minutes. Assembled bowls don’t store well — avocado browns and rice absorbs the sauce.
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