Rain City
Crew Member
First off, I'd like to point out that my 3 year old loves this stuff. Like, hammers it. Not sure why I feel so proud of this, but I do. My wife doesn't care for it for some reason (psycho), so it's awesome that my daughter and I get to have it as "our thing".
Anyways, so I've played with different methods from drying it, to over salting it, to torching it. Nothing was consistent enough. To be clear I'm talking about after you've baked a whole fillet and the skin is wet and limp and left sitting on the parchment in the pan. Tonight I literally just flipped the salmon off the skin into a plate, leaving the skin in the pan. I then salted the skin and dumped some olive oil over it and made sure it was well coated with a puddle of oil in the pan. Threw it back in the oven on the lower rack with the broiler on. The oven was still hot from baking the salmon. It popped and cracked and essentially deep fried the skin for about 3-4 minutes. As soon as the skin started to look brown around the edges I pulled it out and put it onto a paper towel lined plate. Dabbed off the excess oil from the top and by the time I made it back to the table it was one solid crunchy chunk. No soft spots, no burnt spots. Just perfect. Very fast and easy. Sorry no pics.
Anyways, so I've played with different methods from drying it, to over salting it, to torching it. Nothing was consistent enough. To be clear I'm talking about after you've baked a whole fillet and the skin is wet and limp and left sitting on the parchment in the pan. Tonight I literally just flipped the salmon off the skin into a plate, leaving the skin in the pan. I then salted the skin and dumped some olive oil over it and made sure it was well coated with a puddle of oil in the pan. Threw it back in the oven on the lower rack with the broiler on. The oven was still hot from baking the salmon. It popped and cracked and essentially deep fried the skin for about 3-4 minutes. As soon as the skin started to look brown around the edges I pulled it out and put it onto a paper towel lined plate. Dabbed off the excess oil from the top and by the time I made it back to the table it was one solid crunchy chunk. No soft spots, no burnt spots. Just perfect. Very fast and easy. Sorry no pics.
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