Cooking a giant fillet of salmon can feel intimidating. You worry about it sticking to the pan, you worry about flipping it without breaking it in half, and you definitely worry about overcooking it until it tastes like sawdust.
Air fryer salmon bites completely bypass all of that stress.
By cutting the fish into small, bite-sized cubes, you create more surface area. More surface area means more crispy edges, which is arguably the best part of eating fish. Plus, because they’re so small, they cook in about eight minutes. It’s almost suspiciously fast.
I tried this method on a busy weeknight when I forgot to pull anything out for dinner until 5:00 PM. It felt like a cheat code. Toss the cubes, throw them in the basket, make a quick sauce, and suddenly you have a meal that looks like it came from a trendy food truck.
The prep is key
The secret to getting a good crust in the air fryer is moisture control. If your fish is wet, it will steam instead of roasting. Take a paper towel and pat the salmon fillet completely dry before you even pick up your knife.
Cutting the salmon into uniform, one-inch cubes ensures they all finish cooking at the same time. If you have some giant chunks and some tiny slivers, the small ones will dry out before the big ones are done. Try to keep them roughly the same size.
Once they’re cubed, toss them with a little olive oil, paprika, garlic powder, salt, and pepper. The paprika gives them a beautiful color as they cook, while the oil helps the hot air crisp up the outside.
Using the air fryer
The air fryer is essentially a super-powered convection oven on your countertop. It circulates hot air rapidly, which is why it cooks so fast.
When you put the salmon bites in the basket, give them some personal space. If you pile them on top of each other, they will just steam into a sad, pale block of fish. You want the air to hit every single side of every single cube. If you have a small air fryer, cook them in two batches. It only takes eight minutes, so it won’t ruin your evening.
Shake the basket halfway through the cooking time. This makes sure they brown evenly and don’t stick to the bottom.
The sticky glaze rule
Here is the most important rule of this recipe: don’t put the honey glaze in the air fryer.
Honey is sugar. At 400 degrees in a machine blowing high-speed hot air, sugar burns rapidly. If you coat the salmon before cooking, you’ll end up with charred fish and a basket that requires an hour of soaking to clean.
Instead, we cook the fish plain with its dry spices. While it cooks, you whisk together the honey, soy sauce, garlic, and a little sriracha if you like a kick. Microwave it for just a few seconds to loosen the honey and wake up the garlic.
When the salmon comes out of the air fryer - hot, crispy, and perfect - you toss it in a bowl with the glaze. The heat of the fish thickens the sauce slightly, creating a sticky, sweet, savory coating that clings to every bite perfectly.
How to turn it into a meal
These bites are dangerously snackable. You could probably eat them right out of the bowl with a toothpick.
But if you want a real dinner, serve them over a bowl of warm rice. The extra glaze drips down into the grains and flavors the whole bowl. Add a side of roasted broccoli, steamed edamame, or a quick cucumber salad with rice vinegar, and you have a balanced, satisfying meal that took less time than watching an episode of a sitcom.
Fast, healthy, and incredibly flavorful. That is the kind of weeknight cooking we can all get behind.