I started making this on a weeknight when I wanted “healthy” but also wanted butter involved, because balance is important and I’m an adult.
The broiler does the heavy lifting while the asparagus pretends it’s not just along for the ride, and the lime-butter sauce is basically a cheat code.
Last time I served it, I acted like it was a big culinary moment and nobody questioned it—people will believe anything if it’s salmon with a glossy sauce.

Broiled Salmon with Asparagus & Lime-Butter Sauce
EQUIPMENT (PAID LINKS)
- Microplane zester
- Citrus juicer
- Aluminum foil
- Cooking spray
- Food processor
- Oven broiler
Ingredients
- 1 lime about 2 teaspoons zest and 2 tablespoons juice
- 2 salmon fillets about 6 oz each
- 1 teaspoon sriracha seasoning
- 1 bunch asparagus about 1 lb, ends trimmed
- Cooking spray
- 2 tablespoons lime juice from the lime above
- 1 teaspoon minced garlic
- 1 teaspoon honey
- ½ teaspoon sriracha seasoning
- 4 tablespoons salted butter melted
- 2 cups cauliflower rice medley warmed
Instructions
- Prep Lime: Zest the lime to get about 2 teaspoons zest, then juice it to get about 2 tablespoons juice. Keep the zest and juice separate for seasoning and sauce.

- Season Salmon: Place the salmon fillets on a plate and sprinkle the tops with 1 teaspoon sriracha seasoning. Sprinkle the lime zest evenly over the salmon.
- Arrange Pan: Line a baking sheet with aluminum foil. Place the salmon on the pan and arrange the asparagus beside it in a single layer.
- Coat for Broiling: Lightly spray the salmon and asparagus with cooking spray. This helps browning and keeps everything from drying out.
- Broil: Set an oven rack near the top and turn the broiler to high. Broil for about 6 to 8 minutes, until the salmon flakes easily with a fork and the asparagus is tender-crisp.

- Start the Sauce: Add the lime juice, minced garlic, honey, and ½ teaspoon sriracha seasoning to a food processor. Pulse briefly to combine.
- Emulsify with Butter: With the processor running, slowly pour in the melted salted butter and blend until smooth and creamy, about 15 to 30 seconds.
- Serve: Spoon the warmed cauliflower rice medley onto plates, add the asparagus, and top with the broiled salmon. Spoon the lime-butter sauce over the salmon and serve right away.
Video
Broiled Salmon with Asparagus & Lime-Butter Sauce: Lazy-Genus Tips From Someone Who “Definitely Didn’t Burn It Once”
You’re here because you want this to turn out great without trying too hard. Respect.

Broiler Placement: The “Don’t Play Yourself” Move
Put your oven rack close to the top, but not so close the salmon gets a tan it didn’t ask for. I’ve learned the sweet spot is “near the heat” not “making direct eye contact with the flame,” and if your broiler runs nuclear-hot, slide the pan down a notch and save yourself the drama.
Salmon Thickness = Cooking Time Reality Check
If your fillets are thick, eight minutes might be adorable but unrealistic. Thin fillets cook fast; thick ones need a little more time, and the real test is flaking—if it resists, it’s not done, it’s just being stubborn.
Asparagus Hack: Trim Smarter, Not Harder
Snap one spear where it naturally breaks, then line up the rest and cut to match—done. It’s faster and you don’t end up chewing on woody asparagus ends like it’s a punishment. Nobody has ever said, “Mmm, fibrous.”
Cooking Spray Swap When You’re Out
No spray? Brush a little oil on the asparagus and salmon, or drizzle and rub it in with your hands like you’re giving the fish a quick spa treatment. Olive oil works, avocado oil works, and yes, melted butter works—this is a judgment-free zone.
Sriracha Seasoning Alternatives
If you don’t have sriracha seasoning, use a pinch of chili powder or crushed red pepper, or even a tiny dash of hot sauce mixed into the sauce base. Keep it gentle unless your goal is to sweat through dinner. Spice should be a personality trait, not a medical event.
Honey Substitutes for the Sauce
No honey? Maple syrup works and makes the sauce taste like it has secrets. Brown sugar also works in a pinch—just go easy so it doesn’t turn into dessert butter. Any sweet note is basically there to keep the lime from acting like a sour bully.
Garlic Options for Real Life
Fresh minced garlic is great, but jarlic (jar garlic) is how weeknights survive. Garlic powder also works—start small and taste. If anyone judges you for jarlic, they can cook their own salmon.
Butter Sauce Without a Food Processor
No food processor? Whisk it in a bowl like a normal human. Mix lime juice, garlic, honey, and seasoning first, then slowly whisk in melted butter until it looks creamy. It’s not “less authentic,” it’s “less dishes,” which is my love language.
Want the Sauce Thicker and Creamier
If your sauce looks a little thin, it’s usually because the butter was too hot or got dumped in too fast. Let the butter cool for a minute, then stream it in slowly while blending or whisking. Emulsions are basically relationships: rush them and they fall apart.

Cauliflower Rice Medley Swaps
Use regular rice, quinoa, mashed potatoes, or literally whatever is already in your fridge and won’t judge you. Even a salad works if you’re on your “I’m being good” arc. The salmon doesn’t care what it’s sitting on—it just wants attention.
Make-Ahead Shortcut for Weeknights
Mix the sauce base (lime juice, garlic, honey, seasoning) ahead of time and stash it in the fridge, then blend or whisk in melted butter right before serving. It takes two minutes and makes you look wildly prepared. Future-you is always grateful when past-you does literally one thing.
Storage and Reheating Without Ruining Everything
Store salmon and asparagus in an airtight container for up to 2 days, and keep sauce separate if you can. Reheat gently—microwave at low power or warm in a skillet—because blasting salmon on high turns it into dry, sad leftovers. Salmon is delicate, not a Hot Pocket.
Leftover Sauce: Don’t You Dare Waste It
That lime-butter sauce is good on eggs, veggies, potatoes, shrimp—basically anything that needs a glow-up. Warm it gently so it doesn’t split, and if it does split, whisk in a teaspoon of warm water like nothing happened. We don’t throw away liquid gold in this house.
