I have always been someone who reaches for the sriracha bottle before I even taste the food. My family knows it, my friends know it, and my kitchen counter has a permanent sriracha-shaped shadow on it from years of it living in the same spot.
So when I tell you that this crispy sriracha salmon bowl is one of the best things I have ever made, I want you to understand that I am coming at this with very high personal standards for what sriracha can do.
The glaze on these salmon bites is bold without being one-dimensional. The sriracha brings the heat, a touch of honey rounds out the edges, soy sauce adds depth, and a splash of lime juice keeps it bright and alive.
Tossed over crispy golden salmon and served alongside creamy avocado, cool cucumber, and bright green edamame — the bowl balances heat with freshness in a way that makes every single bite interesting.
And the sriracha mayo drizzled over the top is the kind of finishing touch that makes people think you spent way more time cooking than you actually did.
Thirty minutes. One pan. A bowl that tastes like it came from somewhere that charges seventeen dollars for it. That is the whole pitch and it delivers every time.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
- The sriracha glaze hits every note. Spicy, slightly sweet, savory, and bright — it coats every salmon bite in a sticky, glossy sauce that is completely addictive without being overwhelming.
- Crispy salmon bites that actually stay crispy. The sear on these salmon pieces creates a caramelized crust that holds up beautifully under the glaze. No mushy, sad salmon here.
- The bowl is perfectly balanced. The heat from the sriracha glaze meets the coolness of the cucumber, the creaminess of the avocado, and the pop of the edamame. Every element earns its place in this bowl.
- 30 minutes, one pan, zero fuss. This is weeknight cooking at its most efficient. You get bold, complex flavors without a complicated process or a pile of dishes at the end.
- Completely adjustable heat level. This bowl is built around sriracha, but you control how much goes in the glaze and the mayo. Make it a gentle warm or a full-on fire situation — the choice is entirely yours.
Ingredients with Key Notes
For the Crispy Salmon:
- 1.5 lbs salmon fillet, skin removed and cut into 1.5-inch cubes — pat them completely dry before seasoning. Dry salmon sears into a crispy golden crust. Wet salmon steams and goes soft. The paper towel step is not optional.
- 1 teaspoon garlic powder
- 1 teaspoon smoked paprika — smoked paprika over regular here. It adds a subtle smokiness that works beautifully with the heat from the sriracha glaze.
- 1/2 teaspoon onion powder
- Salt and black pepper to taste
- 1 tablespoon avocado or neutral cooking oil
For the Sriracha Glaze:
- 3 tablespoons sriracha — this is the backbone of the whole dish. Use your preferred brand. Huy Fong is the classic choice and works perfectly here.
- 2 tablespoons soy sauce — low-sodium soy sauce keeps the salt level manageable. Tamari for a gluten-free version.
- 1 tablespoon honey — the honey softens the sharp edge of the sriracha and helps the glaze caramelize slightly as it hits the hot pan. Do not skip it.
- 1 tablespoon lime juice — fresh lime only. It lifts the entire glaze and adds a brightness that keeps the heat from feeling heavy.
- 2 cloves garlic, minced
- 1 teaspoon sesame oil — added at the end for a finishing nutty depth.
- 1 teaspoon cornstarch mixed with 1 tablespoon cold water — this thickens the glaze so it clings to every salmon bite instead of sliding off.
For the Sriracha Mayo:
- 3 tablespoons Kewpie or regular mayonnaise
- 1 tablespoon sriracha
- 1 teaspoon lime juice
- 1/2 teaspoon soy sauce — mix together and refrigerate until ready to serve. This sauce takes 60 seconds to make and adds an enormous amount to the finished bowl.
For the Bowl:
- 2 cups cooked white jasmine rice — warm and freshly cooked is ideal. The rice soaks up any extra sriracha glaze at the bottom of the bowl in the most satisfying way.
- 1 ripe avocado, sliced — choose one that gives slightly when pressed. A creamy avocado against the heat of the sriracha glaze is one of the best combinations in this entire bowl.
- 1/2 cup shelled edamame, cooked and warm
- 1/2 English cucumber, thinly sliced
- 2 green onions, thinly sliced
- 1 tablespoon sesame seeds, white and black mixed
- Red pepper flakes for extra heat — optional but worth having on the table
Step-by-Step Instructions
Step 1: Make the Sriracha Mayo
Mix together the mayonnaise, sriracha, lime juice, and soy sauce in a small bowl until smooth. Taste it and adjust the heat level to your preference. Cover and refrigerate while you cook the salmon. Making this first means the flavors have time to come together and the sauce is perfectly chilled when it hits the warm bowl.
Step 2: Make the Sriracha Glaze
Whisk together the sriracha, soy sauce, honey, lime juice, minced garlic, and cornstarch slurry in a small bowl until fully combined. Set it beside the stove before you start cooking. The glaze comes together fast once the heat is involved and you want everything prepped and within reach before the salmon goes in the pan.
Step 3: Season and Sear the Salmon
Pat the salmon cubes completely dry with paper towels. Season all sides generously with garlic powder, smoked paprika, onion powder, salt, and pepper. Heat the cooking oil in a large non-stick or cast iron skillet over medium-high heat. Once the oil is shimmering, add the salmon pieces in a single layer. Do not overcrowd — work in two batches if needed. Sear for 2 to 3 minutes without moving them until a deep golden crust forms on the bottom, then flip and cook for another 2 minutes. Remove from the pan and set aside on a plate.
Step 4: Build the Sriracha Glaze
Reduce the heat to medium. Pour the sriracha glaze mixture into the same skillet. Stir constantly and let it simmer for 1 to 2 minutes until it thickens into a glossy, sticky sauce that coats the back of a spoon. Add the sesame oil and stir to combine. The glaze should look rich, glossy, and deeply orange-red. Watch the heat carefully here — the honey and sriracha combination can catch and burn quickly over high heat.
Step 5: Glaze the Salmon
Return the crispy salmon bites to the skillet. Gently toss them in the sriracha glaze until every single piece is fully coated and glistening. The glaze should cling immediately to the crispy exterior of each salmon bite. Remove from heat right away — you are just coating, not continuing to cook.
Step 6: Assemble the Bowls
Scoop warm jasmine rice into each bowl as the base. Arrange the sriracha glazed salmon bites over one side of the rice. Fan the avocado slices on one side, add the cucumber slices, and scatter the edamame throughout the bowl. Drizzle the sriracha mayo generously over the entire bowl — do not hold back. Finish with sliced green onions, sesame seeds, and a pinch of red pepper flakes if you want extra heat. Serve immediately while the salmon is still hot and the glaze is sticky and glossy.
Serving Suggestions
This bowl adapts beautifully to different tastes, diets, and occasions:
- Brown rice or quinoa — both work as heartier, more fiber-rich bases. The bold sriracha glaze carries well over either option without losing any of its impact.
- Cauliflower rice — the ideal low-carb swap. The heat and richness of the sriracha glaze makes cauliflower rice feel like a genuinely satisfying base rather than a compromise.
- Add mango — diced fresh mango adds a sweet, tropical counterpoint to the heat of the sriracha that is genuinely one of the best flavor combinations you will find in a bowl. Highly recommended as a warm weather variation.
- In lettuce wraps — spoon the glazed salmon bites, avocado, and edamame into butter lettuce cups for a lighter, lower-carb serving option that still delivers the full flavor impact.
- Mild version — reduce the sriracha in the glaze to one tablespoon and use just half a tablespoon in the mayo for a version that has warmth and character without significant heat. Perfect for younger eaters or anyone heat-sensitive at the table.
- Extra spicy version — add a teaspoon of gochujang or a generous pinch of cayenne to the glaze alongside the sriracha for a heat level that will genuinely test your tolerance. IMO this is the version for a Friday night when you want to feel alive.
Storage Tips
Salmon: Store leftover sriracha glazed salmon in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 2 days. Keep it separate from the rice and fresh bowl components to maintain the best texture on everything.
Sriracha Glaze: Any extra glaze stores beautifully in a sealed jar in the fridge for up to 5 days. Use it as a dipping sauce, a stir-fry sauce, or a marinade for chicken or shrimp later in the week.
Sriracha Mayo: Stores in the refrigerator in a sealed container for up to 5 days. It actually improves slightly after a day as the flavors meld together.
Rice: Store separately in an airtight container for up to 4 days. Reheat with a small splash of water to restore fluffy texture.
Fresh Bowl Components: Avocado, cucumber, and edamame are best prepared fresh at serving time. If prepping ahead, toss the avocado with lime juice and press plastic wrap directly against the surface to slow browning. Cucumber and edamame hold well separately in the fridge for up to 2 days.
Reheating: Reheat the salmon in a dry skillet over medium heat for 2 to 3 minutes. Add a small splash of soy sauce or water to loosen the glaze if it has thickened too much in the fridge. Avoid the microwave — it softens the crispy exterior and dries the fish out.
Freezer: Cooked sriracha glazed salmon can be frozen for up to 1 month. Freeze in a single layer on a lined baking sheet before transferring to a freezer bag. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator and reheat in a skillet. Make fresh sriracha mayo at serving time.
Let’s Wrap This Up
These crispy sriracha salmon bowls are proof that bold, satisfying food does not require a long ingredient list, a complicated technique, or more than 30 minutes of your time. One pan, a handful of good ingredients, and a glaze that does all the heavy lifting — that is genuinely all it takes.
This is the kind of recipe I made when cooking started saving me. Something that felt alive, something that demanded your full attention for 30 minutes and rewarded you completely for giving it. A bowl that is spicy and bright and satisfying in all the ways that matter.
Make it this week and let me know what you think. Drop a comment below, save this to your Pinterest board, and share it with the spice lovers in your life who deserve a serious upgrade to their weeknight dinner game. Happy cooking — Kip.
Crispy Sriracha Salmon Bowls That Are Easy, Healthy and Absolutely Addictive
Description
These crispy sriracha salmon bowls are for the people who like their food to have a little fire. Bite-sized salmon pieces are seared until deeply golden and caramelized, then tossed in a bold sriracha glaze that coats every piece in a sticky, spicy, slightly sweet sauce. Served over fluffy white rice with creamy avocado, bright green edamame, cool cucumber slices, and a drizzle of creamy sriracha mayo — this bowl delivers heat, freshness, richness, and satisfaction in every single bite. Healthy, fast, and genuinely one of the most flavorful things you can make in 30 minutes on a weeknight.
Ingredients
For the Crispy Salmon:
For the Sriracha Glaze:
For the Sriracha Mayo:
For the Bowl:
Instructions
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Mix mayo, sriracha, lime juice, and soy sauce for the sriracha mayo. Refrigerate.
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Whisk together sriracha, soy sauce, honey, lime juice, garlic, and cornstarch slurry for the glaze. Set aside.
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Pat salmon dry and season with garlic powder, smoked paprika, onion powder, salt, and pepper.
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Heat oil in a skillet over medium-high heat. Sear salmon in a single layer for 2 to 3 minutes per side until golden and crispy. Remove and set aside.
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Reduce heat to medium. Pour glaze into the same skillet. Simmer for 1 to 2 minutes until thick and glossy. Add sesame oil.
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Return salmon to the skillet and toss to coat in the glaze. Remove from heat.
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Assemble bowls with rice, glazed salmon, avocado, edamame, and cucumber. Drizzle sriracha mayo over the top. Finish with green onions, sesame seeds, and red pepper flakes. Serve immediately.
