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Peach and Hot Honey Glazed Salmon (Your New Favorite Summer Dinner from the Farmers Market)

Peach and hot honey glazed salmon on a white ceramic plate with fresh peach relish

Written by: Amy Larsen

Amy Larsen spent 25 years as a marketing executive helping mutiple industries develop growth strategies - including Food & Beverage. A health scare changed how she thought about food. She founded Butter & Sage Market to rebuild the connection between local food makers and the communities around them. She lives in Round Rock, TX.

Published: June 16, 2026

Late June brings peaches to the farmers market in the South and Southwest, and the moment they show up, everything else at the table becomes background. Tree-ripened peaches — the ones hanging on a branch last week — smell like summer in a way that makes you stop mid-stride. This recipe is built around that peach. And it's made better by one other thing your local market vendor is probably selling right now: hot honey.

The combination sounds like a food trend because it is one — the "swicy" (sweet plus spicy) flavor profile is having a genuine moment in 2026, and this salmon is exhibit A for why it works. The heat from the honey glaze caramelizes against the fish in a way that's genuinely greater than the sum of its parts.

The Market Haul Behind This Recipe

This dish is built from four things you might find at a single summer market visit: a piece of salmon (halibut, sea bass, or thick trout all work too), ripe peaches, local honey (hot honey if you can find it, regular honey plus chili flakes if you can't), and fresh herbs. Everything else is pantry. On the honey: if your market has a beekeeper selling hot honey, this is the moment. Local hot honey — made with a raw honey base and real chili peppers — has a depth and complexity that the national brands genuinely can't match. And it keeps indefinitely.

Why This Salmon Works (Even If You Think You Don't Love Salmon)

The glaze caramelizes under heat to create a sticky-sweet crust and keeps the flesh from drying out — which is why most people say they don't love salmon, by the way. The peach relish is raw, quick-tossed with lime and red onion, assembled while the salmon cooks. Five minutes, zero additional heat.

Make It Yours

No peaches? Stone fruits across the board work: nectarines, plums, apricots, or mangoes. No hot honey? Regular local honey with a teaspoon of chili flakes in the glaze gets you there. This glaze is also excellent on chicken thighs (cook to 165°F internal) and extraordinary on grilled pork tenderloin

If you made this and it changed your relationship with salmon — tag us at @butterandsagemarket. And if your peaches or hot honey came from a local vendor, mention it in the comments. Your neighbors want to know where you got them.

Peach Hot Honey Glazed Salmon

A summer dinner that brings together sweet peak-season peaches and the swicy heat of local hot honey. Twenty minutes, one pan, and a fresh peach relish that takes five minutes to assemble.

Peach Hot Honey Glazed Salmon
Prep 15 min
Cook 15 min
Total 30 min
Yield 4 servings
Level Easy
4

Ingredients

Salmon & Glaze

Peach Relish

Instructions

  1. Whisk together hot honey, soy sauce, olive oil, and garlic. Season salmon with salt and pepper.
  2. Heat a large skillet (cast iron preferred) over medium-high heat. Brush glaze generously over the top of each salmon fillet.
  3. Place salmon glaze-side down in the hot pan. Cook 3-4 minutes until caramelized and golden. Flip and cook another 3-4 minutes until salmon flakes easily. For thick fillets, finish in a 400F oven for 4-5 minutes.
  4. While salmon cooks, combine all peach relish ingredients in a bowl. Toss gently and adjust lime juice and salt to taste.
  5. Serve salmon immediately topped generously with peach relish. An extra drizzle of hot honey is always a good idea.

Notes

The glaze caramelizes quickly - watch the last minute so it does not burn. No peaches? Nectarines, plums, or apricots all work. This glaze is also excellent on chicken thighs (cook to 165F internal) or pork tenderloin.
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