Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (2024)

Why It Works

  • A salt-heavy cure produces a perfectly seasoned gravlax that's neither too sweet nor too salty.
  • Caraway, coriander seeds, and white pepper add layers of flavor to the cure.
  • A not-too-sweet mustard-dill sauce is the perfect foil to the rich, fatty fish.

When I think of luxury foods, I think of things that are expensive enough that I'd buy them only in very small quantities, as an occasional indulgence, if at all. White truffles?No thanks.Caviar?Lemme grab areally smallspoon.Cured fish like lox and sable?I'll get three-quarters of a pound of each—oh wait, that's $17.99per quarter pound? I'll just get a quarter pound of the lox, thanks.

That's why I love gravlax, Scandinavia's dill-flavored cured salmon. It seems like just as much of a treat as lox, but, because it's so easy to make, there's no reason to pay for the cost of someone else's labor—just make it yourself. For the price of a nice fresh fillet of salmon and a very short, two- or three-day wait, you can serve a beautiful spread of hand-sliced gravlax as an hors d'oeuvre or light appetizer. Plus, because you're making it yourself, you can customize its flavor with the aromatics of your choice.

The whole process is ridiculously easy, which is cool, because gravlax continues to be one of those dishes that manage to impress people. (No joke: The hardest thing about making your own gravlax is slicing it.) It's so easy, in fact, that testing this recipe was as simple as figuring out the best ratio of salt to sugar in the cure, plus a couple other variables. After that, I was done.

Unearthing Gravlax: What Is It?

Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (1)

Very simply, gravlax is salmon that's been cured with salt and sugar and infused with the flavor of fresh dill and sometimes other aromatics and spices. Unlike the lox that we eat on bagels, gravlax is not cold-smoked. Thegravpart of its name comes from a Scandinavian word for "to dig" (it shares a root with our word "grave"), and thelaxpart just means "salmon." In essence, the name is telling you that it's "buried salmon," which is how gravlax was apparently originally made:buried in sand on the beach until it was fermented. Sometimes it waswrapped in birch bark and pine needles before it was buried.

Today, the only burying that goes on is in heaps of dill and the dry brine* of sugar and salt, and there's not really any significant fermentation to speak of. There are no funky flavors to develop a taste for, just the clean, mildly salty flavor of lightly cured salmon and dill.

*For the food geeks like me out there, you might be interested to learn that there's a wet-brined counterpart to gravlax called lenrimmad lax.

The Dry-Brine Ratio

Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (2)

Because gravlax is an inherently simple preparation, the biggest question was merely what ratio of salt to sugar to use in the dry brine. Existing recipes are all over the place on this one, with some using more sugar than salt and others calling for the opposite.

On a technical level, what both the salt and sugar do is draw moisture out of the fish through osmosis. This decreases the moisture level of the fish, which in turn makes it less hospitable to microbial life. The salt, meanwhile, also helps ward off bacteria that would otherwise hasten spoilage. This extends the edible life of the salmon, but only for a short amount of time—gravlax is not cured in any long-term sense of the word.

Ultimately, the ratio of salt to sugar is a question of personal taste. If you prefer a sweeter flavor, more sugar should go into your cure. If you have a more savory-leaning palate, you'll want to go heavier on the salt. That said, I still wanted to do side-by-side tests, have my colleagues taste them, and see if there was a consensus or not.

Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (3)

I whipped up three batches of gravlax, one with a 1:1.5 ratio of salt to sugar, one with equal amounts salt and sugar, and one with a 1:1.5 ratio of sugar to salt. My ratios were all based on weight, since volume measurements of salt and sugar can be misleading—not only do salt and sugar have significantly different weights by volume, but different brands of salt can weigh more or less as well.

The differences were easy to detect, and exactly as you'd expect: The sugar-heavy cure produced a sweet-tasting gravlax with very little saltiness; the 1:1 cure was the blandest, neither sweet nor salty; and the salt-heavy cure produced gravlax with a pleasant level of saltiness that was rounded out by a very subtle sweetness. The saltier cure also helped firm the salmon more, while the sweeter gravlax retained more of the salmon's sashimi-like raw-fish texture.

Interestingly, my Serious Eats colleagues were unanimous in their preference for the salt-heavy cure, which was also the one I preferred. Unless you're certain you want a sweeter flavor, I'd recommend leaning toward that salt-heavy ratio, since it seems to be the crowd favorite.

Cure Time and Shelf Life

One of the important things to understand is that gravlax is lightly cured, so the fish's shelf life is extended only by a little, not a lot. Gravlax will go bad on you. Exactly how long it lasts will depend on just how pristine the fish was when you bought it (no matter what, it should besushi-grade—make sure to tell your fishmonger that you're planning on eating it raw), as well as how it has been stored and handled. On average, my samples started smelling a little fishy after about five days or so, not including the curing time itself.

As a general rule of thumb, I'd plan to eat the gravlax within a few days after it's been cured, and stop eating it if you start to detect any off odors.

Adding Flavor

Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (4)

Beyond the salt and sugar, you have options for other flavors in your gravlax. Dill is essential for the classic gravlax flavor, and white pepper is very common. For those who don't like the pungent taste of white pepper, black pepper works well, too.

Great gravlax is possible with salt, sugar, white pepper, and dill alone. If you want to add even more dimension, spices like caraway seeds, coriander seeds, and fennel seeds are all good options. My recipe includes caraway and coriander, because I love those flavors and think they play well with dill, but there aren't really any right or wrong choices here.

You can also supplement the dill with other herbs, like tarragon or fennel fronds. If you can get your hands on some conifer needles, like Douglas Fir, that might even be a cool throwback to the way they did it in the Middle Ages.

Some people add citrus to the mix. I'd strongly advise against using actual wheels of citrus or juice, which some recipes call for; the acid will "cook" the fish, as it does in a ceviche, toughening the fish's exterior in an unpleasant way. If you want citrus flavor, add zest instead.

It's also common to see alcohol, like aquavit and brandy, in gravlax recipes. I prepared a test using my salt-heavy cure along with a few tablespoons of aquavit (on a half-pound piece of salmon), and found that it didn't significantly alter the flavor or texture of the fish. Some liquors, like brandy, might have a bigger flavor impact, but I'd say if you want to taste caraway—the spice used to flavor aquavit—you're better off just using the spice itself.

The Sauce

Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (5)

If you're eating gravlax the traditional way, you'll want to serve it withhovmästarsås, the mustard-dill sauce typically spooned on top. Most recipes make this as a fairly sweet sauce, with a healthy dose of sugar. Maybe it's because I have a palate that tends toward salty things, but I don't understand why anyone would want to spoon such a candy-like sauce on their fatty cured salmon.

My version, while adhering to the basic sauce in terms of its ingredients—dill, Dijon mustard, white vinegar, sugar, and oil—is much less sweet. I add only enough sugar to round out the sharp edges of the vinegar and mustard in the sauce, but not so much as to make it overtly sweet. The vinegar and Dijon mustard shine through, cutting the richness of the salmon while adding a blast of fresh flavors.

How to Slice Gravlax

Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (6)

As I mentioned above, carving gravlax is arguably the only hard thing about it. You absolutely must have a sharp knife.Sortasharp just won't cut it, literally. Gravlax is delicate and will tear under the force of a dull knife. Ideally, you should reach for a thin slicing knife, since the reduced surface area of the thin blade means there's less of it for the salmon to stick to as you slice.

If you feel comfortable with the sharpness of your knife and your skills in wielding it, you can cut beautiful wide slices from the entire fillet. Try to work on a bias so that the slices don't come out as skinny little strips.

If you don't feel that comfortable, you may find it easier to divide the fillet in half lengthwise along its natural division, then cut each fillet half into smaller slices.

Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (7)

Some folks are bothered by the brown-colored blood line that runs along the middle of the fillet on the skin side. You can get rid of it by sliding your knife between the pink salmon flesh and the skin, trimming off the blood line as you go.

Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (8)

Then you can cut your skinned, blood-line-free portion into slices.

Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (9)

You can eat the gravlax alone, or drape the slices on pieces of pumpernickel. Then spoon some of that sauce on top. Now tell me that's not luxurious!

Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (10)

April 2015

This recipe was cross-tested in 2022 to ensure best results.

Recipe Details

Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe

Prep25 mins

Cook0 mins

Active25 mins

Curing Time48 hrs

Total48 hrs 25 mins

Serves10to 15 servings

Ingredients

  • Kosher salt

  • 1 (2 pound; 900g) skin-on sushi-grade salmon fillet, pin bones removed by fishmonger

  • 1 teaspoon caraway seeds

  • 1 teaspoon coriander seeds

  • 40g kosher salt (about 4 tablespoons), plus more for washing salmon

  • 15g sugar(1/2 ounce; about 1 tablespoon)

  • 1/2 teaspoonfreshly ground white pepper or black pepper

  • 2 large bunches dill (75g; 2.5 ounces total)

For the Sauce:

  • 3 tablespoons (45ml) distilledwhite vinegar

  • 2 tablespoons roughly chopped dill fronds

  • 5 tablespoons (75ml) Dijon mustard

  • 1 tablespoon (15g)sugar

  • 1/4 cup (60ml) canola orvegetable oil

  • Freshly ground black pepper

  • Sliced pumpernickel bread, for serving

Directions

  1. Fill a large bowl with cold water and add enough salt to make it taste like the sea. Add salmon and let stand 10 minutes.

    Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (11)

  2. In a skillet, toast caraway and coriander seeds over high heat, stirring constantly, until fragrant, about 1 minute. Transfer to a spice grinder or mortar and pestle and grind finely.

    Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (12)

  3. In a small bowl, stir together salt, sugar, ground caraway and coriander seeds, and white or black pepper until thoroughly combined.

    Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (13)

  4. Remove salmon from bath and pat dry with paper towels. On a work surface, turn salmon skin side up and sprinkle about half of salt mixture all over, rubbing in with fingers.

    Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (14)

  5. Arrange half of dill all over the bottom of a baking dish large enough to hold salmon. Set salmon skin side down on bed of dill. Rub remaining salt mixture all over top and sides of salmon, then top with remaining dill. Cover salmon with plastic, then top with a weight (such as a smaller baking dish or plate with cans of beans on top). Refrigerate for 1 day.

    Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (15)

  6. After 1 day, unpack salmon and turn skin side up. Re-pack with dill, cover with plastic, and set weight back on top. Refrigerate until salmon is sufficiently cured, 1 day longer for a lighter cure or 2 days longer for slightly more cure (which will mean a slightly firmer texture and saltier flavor).

    Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (16)

  7. For the Sauce: Before serving, make the sauce. In a blender or mini food processor, or using an immersion blender, combine vinegar with chopped dill fronds, mustard, and sugar and blend until dill is very finely chopped. Add oil and blend until a smooth sauce has formed. Season with pepper.

    Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (17)

  8. Unpack salmon, scraping off dill, and set on a work surface. Using a very sharp slicing knife, cut gravlax on a bias into thin slices. Arrange on slices of pumpernickel bread and drizzle sauce on top. Serve. Gravlax can be kept refrigerated, tightly wrapped in plastic, for approximately 5 days after curing.

    Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (18)

Special Equipment

Spice grinder or mortar and pestle; baking dish; blender, mini food processor, or immersion blender

  • Salmon
  • Scandinavian
  • No-Cook Seafood
  • Dill
Gravlax With Caraway, Coriander, and Mustard-Dill Sauce Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is traditionally served with gravlax? ›

There's something fishy about Sweden. It's called gravlax, central to the smorgasbord. Gravad lax, or dill-cured salmon, should preferably be served with a mustard sauce, which is French in origin. This marinated salmon dish, along with marinated herring, used to awaken suspicion among tourists.

What is gravlax sauce made of? ›

Gravlax sauce is made in the north of France from a traditional recipe. Comprised of mainly mustard and dill, this sweet-savoury sauce pairs beautifully with smoked fish, and particularly salmon. It can also be used as a marinade or blended into salad dressings.

How long does gravlax keep in the refrigerator? ›

Make-Ahead: You can make this up to 2 days ahead of time. How to Store: Gravlax can last tightly wrapped in plastic or parchment paper in the refrigerator at under 40° for up to 2 weeks. Freeze it wrapped up in plastic for up to 2 months.

What is the shelf life of gravlax? ›

Considering the technologically simple processes used for its preservation (salting, vacuum-packaging and cool storage), fish gravlax is considered a lightly preserved fish product (LPFP), with a shelf-life often not exceeding 18–27 days (Leisner et al., 1994; Lyhs et al., 2001).

What does gravlax mean in English? ›

noun. grav·​lax ˈgräv-ˌläks. variants or gravlaks. : salmon cured especially with salt, sugar, pepper, and dill and often additional ingredients (such as fennel, coriander, lime, and vodka or aquavit)

What do you eat with gravlax for dinner? ›

The traditional accompaniment for gravlax is super simple - a green salad, wedge of lemon and a couple of slices of rye bread all topped with a mustard sauce. We whipped up a quick salad of cucumber and radish in a vinaigrette.

Can you buy gravlax sauce? ›

Ideal for salmon Gravlax. This sauce of Scandinavian origin has a strong dill taste. Ready to consume, it can be enjoyed cold. Our gravlax sauce is the perfect finishing touch to enhance your fish dishes.

Which country is famous for gravlax? ›

Gravlax is one of the few world-famous Scandinavian dishes out there, and while many know that it is basically prepared with salmon and herbs, few know its ancient, Arctic history. The origin of gravlax can be traced all the way back to 14th-century North-Sweden.

Do you eat gravlax raw? ›

Gravlax and lox are cured salmon, lox uses primary salt whereas gravlax uses salt, sugar, and dill, but neither requires cooking.

How to know if gravlax is bad? ›

On average, my samples started smelling a little fishy after about five days or so, not including the curing time itself. As a general rule of thumb, I'd plan to eat the gravlax within a few days after it's been cured, and stop eating it if you start to detect any off odors.

How to tell if gravlax is done? ›

Salmon takes 2 to 3 days to turn into proper gravlax, depending on the variety and thickness of the salmon. The only way to know if gravlax is done is to taste it. After 2 days, I take one salmon side out of the cure, and cut off three thin slices to see if the flavor and texture are to my liking.

Can you overcure gravlax? ›

Regardless of the shape or size of the fish fillet, the salt level will equalise throughout the flesh by osmosis and the fish can't overcure and become too salty. I usually cure about 500 g of fish at a time, but you can make more or less, just varying the cure quantities pro rata.

How do you know if cured salmon has gone bad? ›

If the salmon smells fishy, sour or ammonia-like, then it's gone bad. Appearance: Fresh salmon fillets should be bright pink or orange with no discoloration, darkening or drying around the edges. If you notice any dull or gray coloring, dark spots or filmy white residue, then it's a sign that the salmon has spoiled.

Can gravlax be refrozen? ›

Yes it will freeze fine, just make sure you wrap each slice or piece individually.

Can I freeze homemade gravlax? ›

Gravlax will keep, covered and chilled, for up to a week. It also freezes very nicely, wrapped well in plastic wrap, for about a month; let defrost in the refrigerator.

What do you eat with cured salmon? ›

Serve it with all the fixings—capers, hard-boiled eggs, tomatoes, cucumber, radishes, red onion and steamed potatoes. Lay out everything listed in the ingredients or just a few of the elements, along with an assortment of crackers, co*cktail bread or sliced baguette.

What to serve with gravlax brunch? ›

Like our beet-cured version, this gravlax recipe uses sugar and salt—as well as a variety of herbs and spirits—to cure salmon over several days. We serve it on rich pumpernickel toasts with tangy chive-spiked cream cheese and a briny caper relish, which complements the sweetness of the fish.

What is typically served with lox? ›

Bagel and Lox DIY Brunch Bar
  • assortment of bagels.
  • sliced cucumbers.
  • sliced tomatoes.
  • capers.
  • sliced red onion.
  • avocado.
  • hard boiled egg.
  • sliced radishes.

What do people eat with lox? ›

Lox is traditionally a salt-cured fillet from the salmon's belly, an area with the fattiest and richest meat (similar to a pork belly). If you've never had it with a bagel and cream cheese (or a bagel and "schmear"), then you're seriously missing out.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Twana Towne Ret

Last Updated:

Views: 6572

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (64 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Twana Towne Ret

Birthday: 1994-03-19

Address: Apt. 990 97439 Corwin Motorway, Port Eliseoburgh, NM 99144-2618

Phone: +5958753152963

Job: National Specialist

Hobby: Kayaking, Photography, Skydiving, Embroidery, Leather crafting, Orienteering, Cooking

Introduction: My name is Twana Towne Ret, I am a famous, talented, joyous, perfect, powerful, inquisitive, lovely person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.