The original miso cod recipe — Nobu Matsuhisa’s black cod with miso — works because of a 48-hour marinade that lets white miso paste break down the surface proteins of the fish through enzymatic action. Most home versions cut that to 30 minutes and wonder why the glaze slides off. This recipe marinates for a minimum of 24 hours, which is the threshold where the flavor actually penetrates past the surface.
The result is cod that flakes apart with a fork, tastes sweet and deeply savory at the same time, and caramelizes under the broiler in under 4 minutes.
Why You’ll Love This Miso Cod Recipe
- 24-hour marinade does the real work. The enzymes in white miso tenderize the fish surface and push umami flavor deep into the flesh — a 30-minute soak only coats, it doesn’t penetrate.
- 4-minute broiler finish. The sugars in mirin and miso caramelize fast under high heat, creating a glossy, lacquered crust without overcooking the interior.
- High protein, low effort. Once the marinade is mixed and the fish is wrapped, you do nothing until cook day. Active cooking time is 10 minutes.
- Naturally rich in omega-3. Cod is a lean white fish with significant omega-3 fatty acid content, and miso adds probiotics — functional nutrition without supplementation.
The Butcher’s Selection — Ingredients
Use black cod (sablefish) if you can find it — its fat content is nearly 5x higher than Atlantic cod, which means it stays buttery and moist even under a broiler. Regular cod works but dries out faster, so pull it 1 minute earlier.
- 4 cod fillets (150g each, skin-on if available)
- 3 tbsp white miso paste (shiro miso)
- 2 tbsp mirin
- 1 tbsp sake (or dry white wine)
- 1 tbsp brown sugar
- 1 tsp freshly grated ginger
- 1 tsp sesame oil
- 1 tbsp toasted sesame seeds (garnish)
- 2 green onions, thinly sliced (garnish)
- 1 lime, cut into wedges
How to Make Miso Cod
- Mix the marinade. Whisk together miso paste, mirin, sake, brown sugar, ginger, and sesame oil until smooth. The consistency should be like thin peanut butter.
- Coat and marinate. Pat cod fillets dry. Spread marinade evenly on all surfaces. Place in a sealed container or zip-lock bag. Refrigerate for 24–48 hours. The enzymes in miso need this time to break down surface proteins and push flavor inward.
- Bring to room temperature. Remove fillets 30 minutes before cooking. Gently wipe off excess marinade with your fingers — leave a thin, even layer.
- Broil on high. Place fillets on a foil-lined sheet pan, skin-side down. Position the rack 6 inches from the broiler element. Broil 6–8 minutes until the glaze caramelizes and turns deep amber. Internal temperature: 145°F / 63°C.
- Rest 2 minutes. The fish continues cooking from residual heat. It should flake easily with a fork but still look slightly translucent at the very center — carryover cooking finishes the job.
- Garnish and serve. Top with toasted sesame seeds and sliced green onions. Serve with lime wedges and steamed rice.
Pro Cooking Tips
Watch the Broiler Closely
Miso glaze goes from caramelized to burnt in under 60 seconds. Stay at the oven door from minute 5 onward. The glaze is done when it’s deep amber with a few darker spots — not uniformly dark brown.
Skin-Side Down, Always
The skin insulates the bottom of the fillet from direct sheet-pan heat, preventing the underside from overcooking while the top caramelizes. If using skinless fillets, line the pan with parchment instead of foil to reduce sticking.
Don’t Skip the Sake
Sake rounds out the sharp saltiness of miso and helps the sugar dissolve evenly. Dry white wine works as a substitute. Water does not — it dilutes the marinade without adding flavor complexity.
Recipe Variations
Red Miso Version
Swap white miso for red (aka miso). Reduce sugar to 2 tsp — red miso is saltier and more intense. The result is darker, more savory, less sweet.
Pan-Seared
Sear fillets in a non-stick pan over medium-high for 3 minutes per side instead of broiling. Spoon marinade glaze over the top during the last minute. Less char, more control.
Salmon Swap
Use skin-on salmon fillets with the same marinade and timing. Salmon’s higher fat content handles the broiler heat well. Pull at 125°F / 52°C for medium.
Air Fryer
Air fry at 400°F / 204°C for 8–10 minutes. The circulating air caramelizes the glaze evenly without the hot-spot risk of a broiler.
What to Serve With This Dish
- Steamed jasmine rice — it absorbs the miso glaze drippings and turns every bite into a complete mouthful.
- Pickled cucumber (sunomono) for acidity that cuts through the sweet-savory richness of the glaze.
- Sautéed bok choy with garlic and soy sauce for a clean, bitter green contrast.
- More miso fish recipes if you want to explore different glazes and fish varieties.
- Chilled sake or dry Riesling — the slight sweetness mirrors the mirin in the glaze without competing.
Storage & Meal Prep
Nutritional Information
Per serving (4 servings, cod with glaze, no rice). Values from USDA FoodData Central.
| Nutrient | Amount |
|---|---|
| Calories | 320 kcal |
| Protein | 32g |
| Carbohydrates | 18g |
| Fat | 10g |
| Omega-3 | 0.8g |
| Sodium | 640mg |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Frequently Asked Questions
A 24-hour miso marinade, a clean wipe before broiling, and 6–8 minutes under high heat — that’s the whole method behind this miso cod recipe.
Save This Miso Cod Recipe
Pin it for your next dinner — the 24-hour marinade means you prep today and cook tomorrow with zero effort.
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