Miso-Glazed Salmon with Jaca
Miso-glazed salmon is the restaurant-style dish that feels special but comes together on a busy weeknight — flaky, buttery salmon lacquered in a sweet-savory glaze of fermented miso, soy sauce, rice vinegar, and toasted sesame oil that caramelizes under the broiler into a sticky, glossy crust. The deep umami of the miso plays against the sweetness and a bright hit of vinegar, and it is the perfect place to show off our Jaca swap. We replace the conventional brown sugar with Jaca (100% pure allulose) at double the amount — 2 tablespoons of granular Jaca in place of 1 tablespoon of the brown sugar we grew up with — so the glaze still turns sticky and caramelized with the same sweet-savory balance, no added sugar, and no aftertaste. Because allulose is only about 70% as sweet as traditional sugar, doubling it lands the sweetness right where it should be. A quick marinade does most of the work; the fillets bake in about 15 minutes and finish with a fast broil for that lacquered restaurant crust. Serve over brown rice or soba noodles with edamame or steamed greens — or fire up the grill for a summer cookout. Serves 4. Adapted from The Recipe Critic. This is a Jaca-adjusted healthier version.
Ingredients
- 2 pounds salmon fillets (sliced into 4 fillets)
- salt and pepper (to season)
- 1/4 cup miso paste (white for milder, red for bolder)
- 2 tablespoons soy sauce (low-sodium if you prefer less salt)
- 2 tablespoons Jaca (allulose), granular (replaces 1 tablespoon brown sugar at the 2x ratio)
- 1 tablespoon rice vinegar
- 1 teaspoon sesame oil (toasted)
- green onions, chopped (for garnish)
- sesame seeds (for garnish)
Sweetener Used
2 tablespoons granular Jaca Allulose
Replaces: 1 tablespoon brown sugar
Instructions
- 1
Season the salmon fillets with salt and pepper.
- 2
In a small bowl, whisk together the miso paste, soy sauce, 2 tablespoons granular Jaca, rice vinegar, and sesame oil until smooth. The Jaca steps in for the brown sugar here at double the amount, so the glaze still caramelizes into that sweet-savory restaurant crust with no added sugar. Reserve 1 tablespoon of the glaze for later.
- 3
Add the salmon to a medium bowl with the remaining glaze and turn to coat. Marinate in the refrigerator for 1 to 3 hours.
- 4
Preheat the oven to 375°F. Transfer the salmon to an oven-safe skillet and discard the used marinade. Bake for 12 to 15 minutes, until the fish is almost cooked through and opaque.
- 5
Brush the fillets with the reserved 1 tablespoon of glaze and broil on high for 1 to 2 minutes, until the top is caramelized and the center reaches 125–130°F. Watch closely — because allulose browns faster than sugar, the glaze can go from caramelized to burnt in under a minute. (For a summer cookout, grill the fillets over medium-high heat instead, brushing with the reserved glaze in the last minute or two.)
- 6
Garnish with chopped green onions and sesame seeds. Serve over brown rice or soba noodles with edamame or steamed greens.
Pro Tips
- Jaca is about 70% as sweet as conventional sugar, which is exactly why we double it — you get the same sticky, caramelized restaurant glaze with no added sugar and no aftertaste.
- White miso is milder and slightly sweeter; red miso is bolder and saltier. Either works beautifully — start with white if you are new to miso.
- Do not skip the marinade. Even one hour lets the miso season the fish and the glaze work into the surface so it lacquers up nicely under the broiler.
- Watch the broiler closely — because allulose browns faster than conventional sugar, the glaze can go from perfectly caramelized to burnt in under a minute.
- Summer swap: instead of the oven, grill the fillets over medium-high heat and brush with the reserved glaze in the last minute or two for smoky char.
- Serve over brown rice or soba noodles with a side of edamame or steamed greens for a complete meal.