Salmon on Stakes
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Mar 31, 2025
If you like fish, you’re going to love this smoky salmon—grilled on alderwood stakes in front of a blazing campfire. Serve with our tangy mustard dill sauce. Glamping just got better.
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When the first Europeans arrived in the New World
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they found a highly developed tradition of live-fire cooking. Barbacoa in the Caribbean
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clam bakes in New England, luau's in Hawaii, and of course the great salmon roasts
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in the Pacific Northwest and California. That's the inspiration for our next dish
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salmon roasted on redwood steaks in front of an open fire. To be strictly authentic
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you'd use wild salmon from the Pacific, either king or coho. and ideally it would come with the skin attached
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Take the salmon and cut it crosswise into sections about three inches wide
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This salmon has had the pin bones removed, but you can just run your fingers over the fillets
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and if you feel any bones, pull them out with a needle-nosed pliers
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Next, make a series of starter holes through the salmon skin. There are two reasons I like salmon with the skin one
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First of all, the skin helps the fish hold together on the steaks. Second of all, I love the crunchy taste of grilled salmon skin
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Next, make the rub. It starts with freshly ground black pepper, coarse sea salt And our Primal Grill Twist which pays homage to our southwest Arizona location These are suatu cactus seeds They got a nice crunch and a mild nutty flavor
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So add these to the salt and pepper mixture. Mix the rub with your fingertips
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Season the salmon on both sides with the cactus seed rub. If you can't find suatu cactus seeds, use poppy seeds or sesame seeds
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The suado cactus is an iconic symbol of the Sonoran Desert, where we're taping Primal Grill
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Just rub the seasonings into the fish. Take a piece of salmon
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and thread the narrow end of the redwood steak through the starter hole
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out the other end, and then just sort of curl back through the middle starter hole
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and finally out the other side and slide the fish to the end of the stick
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Do the same with the second piece of salmon. Now let me show you the fire To cook the salmon on a stick we have built a long slender fire pit
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Now this shape is great because it helps localize the fire. Ring of stones on the outside, hardwood fire on the inside
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Earlier today, we made a series of holes in the ground right behind the fire pit
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And you just want to stand the salmon on its redwood steaks in front of the fire
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Cooking time is about 30 minutes in all, 15 minutes on each side
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You'll watch as the fish cooks and turn it around skin side to the fire when you need to
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Another ingenious thing about this method, the self-basting process. As the salmon fat melts, and salmon is a very fatty fish
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it drips down the fish, bastes it, and keeps it moist. Really simple, just spectacular to look at
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The flavors are going to be out of this world. And from time to time, you can put fresh logs on the fire
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You really want to cook next to the embers, not next to a raging fire
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The traditional wood for a Yurok salmon roast is madrone, sometimes called madrone
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It a hard fragrant wood from Northern California and the Pacific Northwest You got the wood fire you got the flavor from the redwood steaks the smoke You really don need
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a lot of seasoning. Turn the fish from time to time so it browns evenly on both sides
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It smells really nice. the salmon looks cooked and it looks beautiful the way you check it is to give it what i call
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the flake test you kind of pinch a little bit and it will break into clean flakes yum
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And here's the salmon
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Hot off the fire You can really smell the wood smoke Okay, let's take a piece
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Look how easily it slides off the steak A little lemon Mmm
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Mmm. Wow. Utterly simple and utterly great. That salmon is so moist
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you get the little nutty crunch of the cactus seed. Salmon roasted in front of an open fire
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from the Klamath River to Primal Grill
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