A sheet pan miso butter salmon dinner with glazed fish, charred broccoli, and a drizzle of soy honey, ready in 25 minutes. ♡

This sheet pan miso butter salmon dinner cooks salmon and broccoli together in 15 minutes flat, all glazed in a sweet salty miso butter that caramelizes into a sticky topping. One pan. Zero stress. For more ideas, see our Crispy Garlic Parmesan Wings Air Fryer.
Easy sheet pan dinner that hits restaurant quality in 25 minutes total. Let’s make it together.

Ingredients
Sheet Pan Miso Butter Salmon
- 4 fillets salmon, 6 oz each, skin on
- 4 cups broccoli florets
- 2 tbsp olive oil
- 4 tbsp salted butter, softened
- 2 tbsp white miso paste
- 1 tbsp honey
- 1 tbsp soy sauce, low sodium
- 2 cloves garlic, minced
- 1 tsp rice vinegar
- 1 tbsp scallions, for garnish
- 1 tsp sesame seeds, for garnish

How to Make Sheet Pan Miso Butter Salmon
- **Heat.** Preheat oven to 425F. Line a sheet pan with parchment.
- **Whisk.** Whisk butter, miso, honey, soy sauce, garlic, and rice vinegar in a bowl until smooth.
- **Roast broccoli.** Toss broccoli with olive oil and salt. Spread on sheet pan. Roast 5 minutes.
- **Add salmon.** Push broccoli to one side. Add salmon skin down to the pan. Brush each fillet with miso butter.
- **Bake.** Roast 12 minutes until salmon flakes and broccoli chars.
- **Glaze.** Drizzle remaining miso butter over salmon. Broil 1 minute until glossy.
- **Serve.** Top with scallions and sesame seeds. Serve over rice.
Why This Recipe Works
Miso plus butter is a Japanese restaurant trick that adds sweet umami fast. Whisk softened butter with white miso, soy, and honey to create a compound butter that melts into a glaze under high heat.
Roasting at 425F is the salmon sweet spot. High heat caramelizes the miso butter into a sticky lacquer in 12 minutes without overcooking the fish. Lower temps melt the butter without browning it, and 450F burns the miso.
Broccoli goes in 5 minutes before the salmon to give it a head start. The dense florets need that extra time to char while the salmon cooks. Drizzle remaining miso butter over both at the end and broil 1 minute for a glossy finish. For more ideas, see our Crockpot French Onion Chicken.
Tips
- Use white miso for mild flavor, not red or yellow which are too strong.
- Let butter soften at room temp 30 minutes before whisking in miso.
- Use thick fillets (1 to 1.5 inches) for best moist results.
- Store leftovers up to 2 days. Reheat at 350F for 6 minutes.
- Common mistake: do not skip the broil at the end, it sets the glaze.
- Use parchment paper for easy cleanup and no stuck salmon.
Variations
- Use cod or halibut instead of salmon. Same cook time.
- Add lemon slices to the pan for citrus brightness.
- Swap broccoli for asparagus or green beans.
- Add 1 tsp grated ginger to the miso butter for extra zing.
- Use chili crisp on top for spicy heat.
- Serve over rice with kimchi for full Korean inspired meal.
Looking for more recipes? Try our Spicy Garlic Shrimp Pasta or Greek Lemon Chicken Soup next.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Cold butter into miso: Soften butter at room temp first or whisk in microwave melted butter.
- Crowding the pan: Leave space between salmon fillets and broccoli for browning.
- Roasting at 350F: 425F is the sweet spot for caramelizing without overcooking.
- Skipping the head start on broccoli: Add broccoli 5 minutes before salmon. It needs the extra time.


Sheet Pan Miso Butter Salmon
Ingredients
Method
- **Heat.** Preheat oven to 425F. Line a sheet pan with parchment.
- **Whisk.** Whisk butter, miso, honey, soy sauce, garlic, and rice vinegar in a bowl until smooth.
- **Roast broccoli.** Toss broccoli with olive oil and salt. Spread on sheet pan. Roast 5 minutes.
- **Add salmon.** Push broccoli to one side. Add salmon skin down to the pan. Brush each fillet with miso butter.
- **Bake.** Roast 12 minutes until salmon flakes and broccoli chars.
- **Glaze.** Drizzle remaining miso butter over salmon. Broil 1 minute until glossy.
- **Serve.** Top with scallions and sesame seeds. Serve over rice.
Notes
Sources: USDA FoodData Central for nutrition data and Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Nutrition Source.


