Salmon piccata takes everything you love about that lemon caper sauce and puts it on a rich fish fillet that cooks in minutes. You sear the salmon until it has a golden crust, build the sauce right in the same pan, and let the browned bits do half the flavoring for you. Start to finish, it's about 25 minutes, which makes it ideal for weeknight cooking...but sophisticated enough to make for friends.

If cooking salmon makes you nervous, this recipe is a forgiving place to start. The light Wondra flour coating gives you a thin crust that holds up, and pulling the fillets a few degrees early keeps them moist instead of dry and chalky. You're not chasing a narrow window of perfection here...you have room to get it right.
This is the same piccata sauce I use on everything in my house, so if you've made my breaded white fish piccata, the method will feel familiar. The backbone doesn't change: lemon, capers, wine, butter, a little beurre manié to hold it all together.
After developing seafood recipes for over 4 years, I've found that once you learn the sauce on one protein, you can put it on almost anything that comes out of the water. Salmon just happens to be one of the best at carrying this creamy piccata sauce.
Ingredients for Salmon Piccata

Full ingredient list and measurements included in printable recipe card below.
Why This Recipe Works
The Wondra coating is doing more than you think. It's a finely milled flour that dissolves into a thin, even layer instead of a thick batter, so you get a crisp golden surface without anything heavy or gummy. That same toasted flour left in the pan also gives the sauce a little body once you build it, so nothing goes to waste. (this is a restaurant trick I learned from Le Bernadin - one of the best restaurants in the world. So you know it's a winner!)
The beurre manié is the stealthy workhorse in the recipe. That little paste of butter and flour is what takes the sauce from thin and broken-looking to glossy and spoon-coating. It also stabilizes the emulsion, which takes the stress out of making a lemon butter sauce.
How to Make Salmon Piccata
1. Make the beurre manié
Mash 1 tablespoon of softened butter with ½ teaspoon of all-purpose flour until it forms a smooth paste, then set it aside. Get this ready before the pan gets busy.


2. Prep the salmon
Dry fillets well, then season with salt and pepper, then coat each one lightly in Wondra and shake off the excess.

3. Get your sear on
Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high. Add the fillets presentation side down and sear undisturbed for 4 to 5 minutes, until deeply golden. Resist the urge to move them. Flip and cook another 2 to 3 minutes, pulling the salmon at 130-135°F internal. Transfer to a plate and tent with foil.


4. Build the sauce
Wipe the excess oil from the skillet but leave the browned bits and toasted flour behind, then return it to medium heat. Add 1 tablespoon of butter, the lemon slices, and the wine. Bring to a boil and reduce by about a third, 2 to 3 minutes. Add the broth and capers and cook another 2 minutes. Whisk in the remaining 3 tablespoons of cold butter and the beurre manié, stirring until the butter melts and the sauce turns glossy and coats the back of a spoon.


5. Finish and serve
Off the heat, stir in the parsley. Taste, and add a squeeze of lemon or a pinch of salt only if it needs it (between the capers and the wine, it usually doesn't). Reduce the heat to low, nestle the salmon back in seared side up, and spoon the sauce around and lightly over each fillet for about a minute to warm through. Keep it under a simmer so the sauce stays silky.

Can I use skin-on salmon?
You can, but this recipe is written for skinless fillets so the Wondra crust forms on the side you'll see. If you go skin-on, sear skin side down first and serve it skin side up, or remove the skin after searing. Just know the dredge won't crisp on the skin the way it does on bare fish.
What kind of wine is best?
A dry white like Sauvignon Blanc, Pinot Grigio, or an unoaked Chardonnay all work.
Can I make salmon piccata without wine?
Yes. Swap the wine for an equal amount of broth and add an extra teaspoon or two of lemon juice to bring the brightness the wine would have given you.
What should I serve with it?
Anything that wants to soak up that sauce. Angel hair or another thin pasta is the classic move, but mashed potatoes, lemony rice, or a piece of crusty bread all earn their keep. Round it out with a simple green like green beans or a tossed salad.
Can I use frozen salmon?
Absolutely, as long as you thaw it fully and pat it bone-dry before dredging. Any surface water will steam the fish instead of searing it and keep the crust from setting up. Ideally, thaw overnight in the fridge, then dry it well.
Print
Pan-Seared Salmon Piccata
- Total Time: 25 minutes
- Yield: 4 1x
- Diet: Pescatarian
Description
Pan-seared salmon, finished in a glossy lemon caper piccata sauce. The dish we already love, made over for salmon instead of the same old chicken.
Ingredients
For the salmon:
4 (5-oz) skinless salmon fillets
2 tablespoons Wondra flour (substitute rice flour or all-purpose flour)
½ teaspoon kosher salt
¼ teaspoon black pepper
1 to 2 tablespoons olive oil (enough for a thin coat in your skillet)
For the piccata sauce:
5 tablespoons salted butter, divided (1 tablespoon to start, 3 tablespoons chilled, 1 tablespoon for the beurre manié)
½ teaspoon all-purpose flour
⅓ cup white wine
¼ cup vegetable or chicken broth
2 tablespoons capers, drained
1 small lemon, sliced thin (about 4 slices)
2 tablespoons fresh flat leaf parsley, diced
Instructions
- First, make the beurre manié: mash 1 tablespoon of softened butter with ½ teaspoon of all-purpose flour with a fork until it forms a smooth paste, then set aside.
- Pat the salmon completely dry with paper towels, season both sides with salt and pepper, and coat each fillet lightly in Wondra, shaking off the excess.
- Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high. Add the fillets (presentation side down) and sear undisturbed for 4 to 5 minutes, until deeply golden. Flip and cook another 2 to 3 minutes, pulling the salmon at 130-135°F internal (carryover takes it to 140°F). Transfer to a plate and tent with foil.
- Wipe the excess oil from the skillet, leaving the browned bits and toasted flour behind, and return it to medium heat. Add 1 tablespoon of butter, the lemon slices, and the wine. Bring to a boil and reduce by about a third, 2 to 3 minutes. Add the broth and capers and cook 2 minutes to reduce slightly. Whisk in the remaining 3 tablespoons of cold butter and the beurre manié, working continuously until the butter melts and the sauce turns glossy and coats the back of a spoon, 2 to 3 minutes. Remove from heat and stir in the parsley. Taste, and add a squeeze of lemon or a pinch of salt only if it needs it. The capers and wine already bring acidity and salt.
- Reduce the heat to low and nestle the salmon back into the pan, seared side up. Spoon the sauce around and lightly over each fillet to warm through, about 1 minute, keeping it under a simmer so the sauce stays silky. Garnish with extra parsley.
Notes
- Quick salt brine (optional). Salt the fillets all over with coarse kosher salt and let them sit 10 minutes, then rinse and pat very dry. Re-season with salt and pepper before the Wondra. The salt loosens the surface proteins and minimizes that white albumin that often beads up on salmon when cooking in a hot pan. Dry the fillets well after rinsing so you still get a clean sear.
- Wipe the oil, keep the fond. Pooled oil makes the sauce greasy, but the browned bits and toasted Wondra left in the pan add flavor and a little body.
- Wine-free. Swap the wine for an equal amount of broth plus an extra teaspoon or two of lemon juice.
- Prep Time: 10
- Cook Time: 15
- Category: Dinner, Main Dishes
- Method: Stove Top
- Cuisine: Italian







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