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Low Carb 3-Ingredient Salmon Patties

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Four golden-crusted salmon patties in a cast iron skillet, crispy at the edges, served with lemon wedges and a small bowl of creamy dipping sauce on a white linen surface.

 

 

Crispy on the outside, tender all the way through, on the table in fifteen minutes. No breadcrumbs. No drama.

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By Sarah M.  ·  March 2026  ·  10 min read

 

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15 Minutes
Keto Friendly

Hands pressing a salmon patty mixture into a round flat disc on a white plate, with a bowl of mixed salmon and cream cheese visible alongside.

Golden-crusted salmon patties in a cast iron skillet,
served with lemon wedges and a dollop of sour cream

 

Somewhere in the middle of my low-carb phase a few years back — the one that started enthusiastically and slowly became a negotiation with myself about whether a single cracker really counts — I got very tired of eating the same five things over and over. Chicken. Eggs. Salad. More chicken. The occasional piece of cheese eaten directly over the sink at 9pm.

 

I needed something that felt like real food. Something that required a pan and came out hot and golden and made me feel like I’d actually cooked dinner. But also something that wasn’t going to take an hour, because I was running on fumes and low on patience.

 

Enter: these salmon patties. Three ingredients. Fifteen minutes. Done.

 

My mom made salmon patties my whole childhood — the traditional kind, with crackers and an egg and onion and sometimes she’d fry them in enough oil that they basically floated. I loved them. But the breadcrumb-heavy version didn’t fit what I was eating at the time, so I started tinkering. My first attempt was a genuine disaster. I tried to skip the egg entirely because I’d convinced myself the salmon would hold together on its own. It did not. The pan got a sort of sad salmon scramble that tasted fine but looked like something went very wrong, which — to be clear — it had.

 

The egg is not optional. I know that now.

 

Version two was too wet because I didn’t drain the canned salmon properly. I mean, I sort of drained it, in the way where you tip the can a little and call it good. That’s not draining. Lesson learned the sticky, pan-sticking way.

 

By version three I had it down: salmon, egg, cream cheese. That’s it. Crispy edges, a center that’s tender and flaky, done before you’ve finished one episode of anything. These are now on regular rotation and I’m genuinely a little embarrassed it took me so long to figure them out.

 

Three ingredients doesn’t have to mean three flavors. Done right, this is the kind of simple that tastes like you did something clever.

Prep Time: 5 min
Cook Time: 10 min
Total Time: 15 min
Makes: 6–8
Difficulty: Easy

 

Why This Works

 

 

It’s three ingredients. You’d be forgiven for assuming there’s not much going on here. But each one is pulling real weight, and the combination is smarter than it looks.

Cream cheese instead of breadcrumbs. This is the whole trick. Softened cream cheese binds the mixture together without adding carbs, and it melts into the patty as it cooks, making the interior creamy and rich in a way that plain breadcrumbs never quite do. It also adds a very subtle tang that makes the salmon taste brighter. If you’ve never tried this, it’s going to surprise you.
The egg is the structure. It’s what keeps the whole patty in one piece from mixing bowl to pan to plate. One egg per can of salmon is the ratio that works. Too many eggs and the patties get bouncy and weird. Too few — or none, as I learned personally — and you have a pan full of well-seasoned rubble.
Canned salmon is completely legitimate here. You don’t need fresh. I know some people feel strongly about this, but canned salmon is already cooked, it’s shelf-stable, it’s cheap, and when it’s mixed with cream cheese and crisped in a hot pan nobody is going to quiz you about it. Just drain it well. Really well. Tip the can, press the lid against the fish, and get the liquid out.
Hot pan, a little patience, don’t move them. The crispy crust that makes these satisfying comes from letting the patties sit undisturbed on a hot surface until they’re golden. If you try to flip too early, they’ll stick and fall apart. You’ll know they’re ready when they release easily on their own. That’s the
sign.
Seasoning isn’t an ingredient but it matters. Salt, pepper, a little garlic powder, maybe some Old Bay if you have it — none of this counts as an ingredient in the three-ingredient premise of the recipe but all of it makes the final result taste like someone actually cooked it. Don’t skip seasoning just because it’s not in the ingredient count.
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What You’ll Need

Ingredient Amount Notes
Canned salmon 2 cans (about 14–15 oz total) Drained really well. Pink salmon is fine, sockeye is richer. Check for any bones and remove them — or don’t, they’re soft and technically edible, but some people find them unsettling.
Cream cheese About 3 oz, softened Take it out of the fridge 20 minutes before you start. Cold cream cheese won’t mix in smoothly and you’ll end up with lumps. Full fat is better here — this is not the place for reduced fat.
Egg 1 large The binder. Non-negotiable. Ask me how I know.
Salt & black pepper To taste Season more generously than you think you need to — the salmon can handle it.
Garlic powder A good shake Optional but highly recommended. Onion powder works too. A pinch of cayenne if you like a little heat.
Old Bay seasoning About a teaspoon Technically optional, practically essential. It was made for fish. If you don’t have it, smoked paprika plus a little celery salt gets you most of the way there.
Oil or butter for the pan A tablespoon or so Avocado oil, olive oil, butter — whatever you cook with. You just need enough to coat the bottom of the pan. Don’t drench it.

Four golden-crusted salmon patties in a cast iron skillet, crispy at the edges, served with lemon wedges and a small bowl of creamy dipping sauce on a white linen surface.

How to Make Them

  • Step 01

Drain and prep the salmon

Open both cans of salmon and drain them thoroughly. Tip each can over the sink, press the lid firmly against the fish, and hold it for a full thirty seconds. Then tip it the other way and press again. You want the salmon as dry as possible — excess moisture is what makes patties fall apart and stick to the pan. Once drained, turn it out into a bowl and pick through it quickly for any stray bones or skin bits, depending on how you feel about those.

The first time I made these I gave the can one quick tip over the sink for maybe three seconds and thought, close enough. The patties were soggy, they fell apart in the pan, and I stood there watching them disintegrate with the specific resignation of someone who knows exactly what they did wrong. Drain. The. Salmon. Properly.

 

 

  • Step 02

Mix the patty base

Add the softened cream cheese and egg directly to the salmon bowl, along with your salt, pepper, garlic powder, and Old Bay if you’re using it. Mix everything together with a fork until it’s combined — the cream cheese will incorporate into the salmon and the mixture should hold together when you press a little between your fingers. If it feels too loose, a couple of minutes in the fridge firms it up. Don’t overmix. You want it combined, not pureed.

 

 

Step 03

Form the patties

Scoop the mixture into roughly equal portions — I use a big spoon and eyeball it — and press each one into a flat, round patty about as thick as your thumb. Somewhere between six and eight patties depending on how big you make them. Set them aside on a plate while your pan heats up. Don’t make them too thick or the outside will be done before the center warms through.

Wet hands are your friend here. The mixture is a bit sticky and dry hands make it want to cling to your palms. A quick rinse between patties keeps things clean and the patties hold their shape better. Small thing, makes a difference.

 

 

Step 04

Cook until golden

Heat your oil or butter in a skillet over medium to medium-high heat until it shimmers. Lay the patties in without crowding them — if your pan isn’t big enough, do two batches rather than stack them in. Then leave them alone. Seriously. Set a timer for about four minutes and don’t touch them. When they’re ready to flip, they’ll release cleanly from the pan. If they resist, they need another minute. Flip once, cook the second side for three to four minutes until equally golden, and that’s it.

 

 

Step 05

Rest briefly and serve

Transfer the patties to a plate and let them sit for a couple of minutes before eating — they firm up slightly as they cool and the centers settle. Serve with lemon wedges (non-negotiable in my house), a dollop of sour cream or Greek yogurt, or a quick sriracha mayo if you want something with a little heat. They’re great on their own, over a simple salad, or next to whatever vegetable is fastest to make.

 

 

Four golden-crusted salmon patties in a cast iron skillet, crispy at the edges, served with lemon wedges and a small bowl of creamy dipping sauce on a white linen surface.

Tips & Storage

 

  • If the mixture feels too wet to form patties, refrigerate it for fifteen minutes. It firms up quickly and is much easier to handle cold.
  • A cast iron skillet gives you the best crust. Non-stick works fine but you won’t get quite the same golden exterior. Either way, make sure the pan is properly hot before the patties go in.
  • Fresh salmon works too — just cook it first and let it cool before mixing. The texture is a little flakier and the flavor is cleaner if that matters to you.
  • These are great cold the next day, honestly. Flake them over a salad, tuck them into lettuce wraps, or eat one standing in front of the fridge at lunch. No judgment.
  • Squeeze of lemon over the top right before eating makes everything brighter. Don’t skip this.
  • Want to add flavor without adding carbs? Finely diced jalapeño mixed into the patty base, a little Dijon stirred in, or chopped capers — any of these work and none of them break the low-carb premise.
  • Make a double batch and freeze the cooked patties between sheets of parchment. Reheat in a dry skillet over medium heat — they come back beautifully and are better than microwaving.
Cooked patties keep in the fridge for up to three days in a covered container. They reheat well in a skillet — two minutes per side over medium heat gets them crispy again, which a microwave will absolutely not do. Write the date on the container. They look very similar to mystery leftovers from further back in the fridge and salmon that’s been in there for a week is a different situation entirely from salmon that’s been there for two days. The tape-and-marker system has never failed me when I actually use it, which is, to be honest, not always.

 

Nutrition Info

 

 

Per serving of 2 patties, based on 3 servings total. Estimates — exact values will vary based on your salmon brand, how much fat you use in the pan, and whether you add any dipping sauces on the side.

 

 

Nutrient Per Serving (2 patties) Notes
Calories ~280 kcal Genuinely filling for the calorie count. The protein keeps you satisfied.
Total Fat ~17g Salmon fat is good fat — omega-3s, doing their thing.
Saturated Fat ~6g Mostly from the cream cheese and cooking fat.
Carbohydrates ~1g Basically zero. The whole low-carb promise, delivered.
Fiber ~0g Add a side salad and the meal’s fiber situation improves considerably.
Sugar ~0.5g Trace amounts. Nothing to worry about here.
Protein ~32g This is the standout number. Salmon is one of the best protein sources going.
Sodium ~480mg Canned salmon carries some sodium already. Taste before you add extra salt.
Omega-3s ~1,800mg Not a standard nutrition label item but worth mentioning. Salmon earns its reputation here.

 

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