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Grilled Salmon Kebabs
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Grilled Salmon Kebabs

Prep Time 20 min
Cook Time 10 min
Servings 4

Grilled Salmon Kebabs

Grilled salmon kebabs come off the grill with crisp-edged vegetables, juicy salmon, and just enough smoky char to make the whole plate taste like more effort went into it than actually did. The salmon stays tender because it cooks fast and goes on the skewer in even-sized pieces, while the vegetables pick up the marinade and soften at the edges without collapsing.

The trick here is keeping the marinade bright instead of heavy. Lemon juice and dill give the salmon that clean, fresh flavor that works so well with grilled fish, but the fish only needs a short soak. Leave it too long and the acid starts to cure the surface, which changes the texture before it even hits the grill. The other thing that matters is cutting everything to a similar size so the salmon and vegetables finish together instead of one going dry while the other is still raw.

Below, I’ve included the timing that keeps the salmon from sticking, the one marinating window that works best, and a few useful swaps if you want to change up the vegetables or make the recipe fit what’s already in your kitchen.

The salmon stayed so tender and the zucchini had just enough char without turning mushy. I marinated it for 30 minutes like you said, and the lemon-dill flavor came through perfectly.

★★★★★— Megan R.

Save these grilled salmon kebabs for the nights when you want smoky salmon, lemony vegetables, and almost no cleanup.

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The Short Marinate Window That Keeps Salmon Tender

Salmon is one of those proteins that can go from silky to dry fast if you push it too far, and the lemon in this marinade is the reason timing matters. Thirty minutes is enough for the garlic, dill, and olive oil to season the fish without letting the acid start changing the surface texture. That’s the line to respect here.

The other mistake people make is using a marinade that’s too thin or too aggressive. Olive oil carries the herbs and helps the salmon brown, while the lemon juice brightens everything without needing much time. If the fish sits in the acid for much longer than half an hour, the outside starts to firm up before the grill even gets involved.

  • Short marinating time — This keeps the salmon tender and prevents a cured, chalky edge.
  • Olive oil — It helps the herbs cling and gives you a better grilled surface than lemon juice alone.
  • Fresh dill — Dried dill works in a pinch, but fresh dill has the clean, grassy note that fits grilled salmon best.
  • Even-sized salmon cubes — Cut them as close to 1 inch as you can so the fish cooks at the same pace as the vegetables.

What the Salmon, Zucchini, and Lemon Are Each Doing Here

Grilled Salmon Kebabs tender lemon-herb
  • Salmon fillets — Use a firm fillet that holds together when cubed. Skinless salmon is easiest for skewers, but if you only have skin-on fillets, remove the skin first so the pieces thread cleanly.
  • Zucchini — This vegetable softens quickly and picks up grill marks fast. Cut it into sturdy chunks so it doesn’t collapse before the salmon is done.
  • Red bell pepper — It brings sweetness and color, and it keeps its shape better than softer vegetables. Yellow or orange peppers work the same way.
  • Red onion — The edges sweeten on the grill and balance the lemon. Slice it into thick pieces so it stays on the skewer instead of falling apart.
  • Wooden skewers — Soak them long enough to keep the exposed ends from burning. If you’re using metal skewers, skip the soaking step and still oil them lightly so the fish releases cleanly.

Building the Skewers So the Fish and Vegetables Finish Together

Whisking the Marinade

Start by whisking the olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, dill, salt, and pepper until the mixture looks unified and a little thickened. You don’t want the lemon floating on top in a separate layer, because uneven marinade means uneven flavor on the skewers. If the garlic is very wet or the dill is clumped, break it up before the fish goes in.

Letting the Salmon Take on Flavor Without Curing

Add the salmon to the marinade and let it sit for 30 minutes, not longer. The fish should look glossy and lightly seasoned, not opaque on the outside. If you leave it too long, the acid tightens the surface and the salmon loses that soft, flaky texture after grilling.

Threading for Even Cooking

Alternate salmon, zucchini, pepper, and onion on the skewers, leaving a little space between pieces so the heat can move around them. Packed skewers steam before they brown, which is why soggy vegetables show up so often on grilled kebabs. If the salmon cubes are slipping, push them through the widest part and keep the pieces snug but not crushed.

Grilling Until Just Cooked Through

Cook over medium-high heat for 3 to 4 minutes per side, turning once the salmon releases easily. If it sticks, give it another 20 to 30 seconds; fish usually tells you when it’s ready by loosening from the grates. Pull them off as soon as the salmon turns opaque and flakes at the center, because a minute too long is enough to dry out the edges.

Swap the Vegetables Based on What Holds Up on the Grill

Broccoli florets, cherry tomatoes, or thick mushrooms can stand in for the zucchini and pepper, but keep the pieces substantial so they don’t burn before the salmon is done. Softer vegetables like squash need the same treatment as zucchini: cut large enough to stay on the skewer and give them a little space. The result changes the flavor balance, but the grilling method stays the same.

Make It Dairy-Free Without Changing a Thing

This recipe is already dairy-free, which makes it easy to serve as written. The clean lemon, garlic, and dill combination gives you a bright finish without needing yogurt, butter, or cream. That means the grill flavor stays front and center instead of getting buried under a rich sauce.

Use Metal Skewers for Easier Turning

Metal skewers make the kebabs easier to flip and don’t need to be soaked first. They also conduct heat through the center of the salmon, which helps the middle cook a little more evenly. If you use them, still oil the skewers lightly so the fish releases cleanly.

Scale Up for a Crowd Without Crowding the Grill

Double the marinade and prep the skewers ahead, but grill in batches so the kebabs have space over the heat. Crowding traps steam and leaves the vegetables soft instead of browned. Holding the finished kebabs loosely tented with foil for a few minutes is fine, but don’t stack them or the grill marks will fade.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 2 days. The salmon stays usable, but the vegetables soften.
  • Freezer: Freezing is not ideal once the kebabs are cooked. The salmon can turn dry and the vegetables lose their texture when thawed.
  • Reheating: Warm gently in a covered skillet over low heat or in a 300°F oven just until heated through. High heat dries salmon out fast, so don’t blast it in the microwave unless you don’t mind a firmer texture.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use frozen salmon for kebabs?+

Yes, as long as it’s fully thawed and patted dry before marinating. Extra moisture keeps the salmon from browning well and can make the marinade slide off the surface. Dry fish gives you better grip on the skewers and better color on the grill.

How do I keep salmon from sticking to the grill?+

Oil the grates well and let the grill preheat before the skewers go on. Salmon sticks when it’s moved too early, so give it a minute to sear and release on its own. If a piece clings, it needs a little more time rather than more force.

Can I marinate the salmon overnight?+

I wouldn’t. The lemon juice is strong enough to start changing the texture if it sits too long, and salmon gets pasty at the edges instead of tender. Thirty minutes is the sweet spot for flavor without that cured finish.

How do I know when the salmon is done on the grill?+

The salmon should turn opaque and flake easily at the center but still look moist when you cut into it. If it looks dry on the edges, it’s already gone a little too far. Pull it as soon as it flakes cleanly, because carryover heat finishes the job.

Can I make these salmon kebabs ahead of time?+

You can cut the vegetables and mix the marinade a few hours ahead, but I’d wait to skewer the salmon until close to grill time. Once the fish is threaded and marinating, the clock matters more because of the lemon juice. That keeps the texture clean and prevents the edges from turning opaque before cooking.

Grilled Salmon Kebabs

Grilled salmon kebabs with lemon-herb marinade are juicy, tender, and cooked fast over medium-high heat. Thread salmon cubes with zucchini, bell pepper, and red onion for colorful seafood grilling every time.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Marinating 30 minutes
Total Time 1 hour
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Mediterranean
Calories: 520

Ingredients
  

Kebab ingredients
  • 1.5 lb salmon fillets Cut into 1-inch cubes.
  • 2 zucchini Cut into chunks.
  • 1 red bell pepper Cut into chunks.
  • 1 red onion Cut into chunks.
  • 4 wooden skewers Soaked.
Lemon-herb marinade
  • 0.25 cup olive oil
  • 2 tbsp lemon juice
  • 2 garlic Minced; about 2 cloves.
  • 1 tbsp fresh dill Chopped.
  • 1 salt To taste.
  • 1 black pepper To taste.
  • 2 lemon wedges For serving.
  • 1 tbsp fresh dill For garnish.

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan
  • 1 grill

Method
 

Make the lemon-herb marinade
  1. Whisk together olive oil, lemon juice, minced garlic, chopped dill, salt, and black pepper until combined and aromatic, 30-60 seconds, and you should see the mixture turn slightly lighter.
  2. Transfer the salmon cubes to a container and coat with the marinade, then let it marinate 30 minutes in the refrigerator (do not marinate longer because the acid can start cooking the fish).
Assemble the kebabs
  1. Thread salmon cubes and vegetable chunks alternately onto the soaked wooden skewers, leaving a little space between pieces so they grill evenly.
Grill and serve
  1. Preheat the grill to medium-high heat, aiming for steady heat before cooking the kebabs.
  2. Place the salmon kebabs on the grill and cook for 3-4 minutes per side, turning once, until the salmon is cooked through and the vegetables are lightly charred with grill marks.
  3. Serve immediately with lemon wedges and fresh dill for a bright, herb-forward finish.

Notes

Pro tip: marinate in the refrigerator and stick to the 30-minute window—lemon juice can “cook” the surface if you go longer. Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days; freezer: no (vegetables and salmon texture won’t hold up as well). For a lighter swap, use half olive oil and half Greek yogurt in the marinade for a tangy, creamy coating.

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