Crispy skin, butter-basted, done in under 20 minutes.
Trout is underrated. It’s mild, cooks fast, and takes to butter and lemon the way most fish only dream about. A hot pan, a quick sear, and you’re done.
Make it a bowl. Make it a plate. Use what you have.
Ingredients
- 2 trout fillets, skin on (or whole trout, cleaned and butterflied)
- a drizzle of avocado oil
- a clove or two of garlic, minced
- a knob of butter
- a squeeze of lemon, plus wedges for serving
- a handful of fresh parsley or dill, roughly chopped
- salt and a few cracks of black pepper
- a pinch of paprika or chili flakes if you want heat
METHOD
- Pat trout dry. Season both sides with salt, pepper, and paprika or chili flakes if using.
- Heat avocado oil in a skillet over medium-high until hot. Add garlic and let it go until fragrant — about 30 seconds.
- Lay trout skin-side down. Press gently with a spatula for the first minute to keep the skin flat. Cook 3–5 minutes until the skin is crispy and the flesh is mostly opaque.
- Flip. Add butter and a squeeze of lemon to the pan. Spoon the butter over the fish as it finishes — another 2–3 minutes, until it flakes easily.
- Scatter fresh herbs over the top. Serve with lemon wedges.
Build It Your Way
The pan sauce is where the flavor lives — build from there:
- stir capers and a pinch of lemon zest into the butter before it hits the pan
- add halved cherry tomatoes and a few olives in the last 2 minutes for a Mediterranean lean
- mix a spoonful of Dijon with lemon juice and spoon over at the end
- swap parsley for tarragon, basil, or chives — or use all three
- serve with a spoonful of tzatziki on the side
- if using whole trout, stuff the cavity with lemon slices and herbs before cooking
Adjust to your taste. Use what you have.
Swaps & Notes
- Avocado oil handles high heat without burning — use it for the sear, add butter after flipping.
- No trout — salmon, branzino, or arctic char all work with the same method.
- Leftovers flake well into a grain bowl or over greens the next day.
- Whole trout takes a minute or two longer than fillets. It’s done when the flesh near the spine goes opaque.

