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Kedgeree-inspired salmon and curry rice

Heavily salted salmon marinated overnight is substituted for the traditional smoked haddock. The rest is traditional kedgeree, a British breakfast or brunch dish.
Kedgeree-inspired salmon and curry rice
Egg+ Rice / other grain+ Seafood recipe by Connie Veneracion | Last updated: 01.06.2026
Prep: 10 minutes mins
Cook: 20 minutes mins
Marinating 12 hours hrs
Total: 12 hours hrs 30 minutes mins
Servings: 3 people
Course: Breakfast
Cuisine: Fusion
Label: Salmon
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Connie’s notes

If you’re a fan of Downton Abbey, you might have heard Lord Grantham and Mrs. Potmore mention kedgeree. There are at least two theories as to the origin of this British breakfast / brunch dish.
One school of thought says kedgeree originated in India and was brought back to England by returning Brits. The other school of thought says that the recipe for a smoked fish and rice dish comes from Scotland, brought by Scottish soldiers to India where it intermarried with curry.
Whichever the real origin of the dish is, two ingredients are essential: fish and curry rice. Since I couldn’t get the traditional smoked haddock, I improvised.
I spread rock salt on salmon fillets, let the fish soak the salt in the fridge overnight and, the next day, I rinsed the fillets to remove excess salt on the surface. The salted salmon fillets were poached in milk the way smoked haddock is cooked when making kedgeree.
If you can get smoked haddock, the traditional seafood component of kedgeree, you can skip the part about salting and marinating salmon. Simply poach the haddock in milk and add to the cooked curry rice.
How much water to cook the rice in depends on the age of the rice. Newly harvested rice will cook in much less water than aged rice.

Ingredients

  • 200 grams salmon fillet (7 oz)
  • 2 tablespoons rock salt
  • ½ cup full-fat milk
  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • 1 white or yellow onion peeled and chopped
  • 2 cloves garlic minced
  • 1 ¼- inch slice ginger peeled and finely chopped
  • 1 tablespoon curry powder
  • ¼ teaspoon ground coriander
  • ½ cup Basmatic rice or other long-grain rice
  • 3 hard-boiled eggs quartered
  • 2 tablespoons chopped parsley
  • 2 tablespoons chopped cilantro
  • ½ lemon

Instructions

Salt the salmon

  • Rinse the salmon fillet and wipe dry with paper towels.
  • Place the salmon in a shallow bowl, dump in the salt and rub into the fish flesh.
  • Cover the bowl and allow the salmon to marinate in the fridge overnight.

Cook the curry rice

  • Melt the butter in a pan.
    Sauteeing onion and curry powder
  • Saute the onion, garlic and ginger with the curry powder until dark and nutty in aroma.
  • Stir in the Basmati rice.
    Adding long grain rice to sauteed onion and curry powder
  • Pour in a cup and a half of water.
  • Stir in half a teaspoon of salt, cover the pan and leave the rice to absorb the liquid.

Cook the salmon

  • While the rice cooks, rinse the salmon (to remove excess salt on the surface) and dry with paper towels.
  • In a sauce pan, heat the milk.
  • When the milk starts to bubble, slide in the salmon fillets.
    Poaching salted salmon in milk
  • Poach the salmon in the milk for two to three minutes then flip and cook for another two to three minutes (if your salmon fillets are more than an inch thick, cook for a minute or two longer).
  • Scoop out the salmon and cool on a plate then break up into chunks.
  • When the rice is done, taste and stir in more salt if needed.
  • With the heat off, add the salmon chunks and half of the egg quarters to the rice, and toss lightly to distribute.

Assemble your dish

  • Reserve a tablespoon each of parsley and cilantro, and toss in the rest with the salmon, eggs and rice in the pan.
    Kedgeree-inspired salmon and curry rice
  • Squeeze the juice from half a lemon over the rice dish.
  • Ladle the salmon and curry rice into shallow bowls, top with the remaining egg quarters, and the reserved parsley and cilantro.
    Kedgeree-inspired salmon and curry rice
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About Connie Veneracion

Home cook and writer by passion, photographer by necessity, and good food, coffee and wine lover forever. I create, test and publish recipes for family meals, and write cooking tips and food stories. More about me and my umami blogs.

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