I am definitely a meat fisherman.. I think that's becoming pretty well-known around these parts. I have two large freezers in the garage that get loaded with salmon, albacore, halibut, and various other species I harvest through the year. I tend to end up with quite a lot of salmon as one Columbia chinook goes a long ways, and I usually end up with a few. But the bulk of my salmon meat tends to come from the October hatchery coho season on the Columbia where I really stack them up.
I had a very good year last year. Noticing I still have a significant amount to make use of before the next season starts. I always find ways to use 100% of what goes in my freezer, but always looking for inspiration. Especially since one of the ways I may make use of some of these hatchery coho is to take some to the Swap & Shop here in about 2-ish weeks.
Personally, I'm a charcoal grill maximalist. I tend to steer away from the popular methods I see most people using: We've owned a pellet grill which we got rid of after about 6mo, and I literally gave away our gas grill because I found it boring. I just find charcoal to take it to another level, and I don't find it to be particularly inconvenient.

(some halibut fillets with some chinook tail fillet)
My charcoal grill method
I get the briquettes going in the chimney (no lighter fluid here). Dump out and let them breathe/heat up for a bit. I tend to wait on covering them up as that stops the heating.
Meat prep: I like to rub in some umami sea salt (I mix shitake mushroom powder with sea salt that I keep in a mason jar), then baste with a thin layer of mayo. The mayo typically mostly runs off, but it really helps keep the outer layers from drying out. But that's usually it. I don't do a whole bunch of anything else as a well-cared for piece of fish shouldn't need much.
I like a relatively hot grill - start with skin side up to get the meat side started. After a couple minutes, flip over, cover, and let it cook for a few minutes. Covering up will often bring up some extra smoke from the briquettes for that added "something" you can't get on gas.
Now the part most seem to mess up: DON'T OVERCOOK IT! I pull it off when I do a fork test and the thickest part is ALMOST cooked. Take it off the heat at that point and let it rest: Under foil if you prefer, for about 5mins. This is when the cooking finishes. Leaving it to cook all the way through on the grill will leave you with a tougher, dryer, less flavorful chunk of salmon (this is even more true for something like halibut).
That's my base method. Interested to see what others do, even if it goes against my way of thinking
I had a very good year last year. Noticing I still have a significant amount to make use of before the next season starts. I always find ways to use 100% of what goes in my freezer, but always looking for inspiration. Especially since one of the ways I may make use of some of these hatchery coho is to take some to the Swap & Shop here in about 2-ish weeks.
Personally, I'm a charcoal grill maximalist. I tend to steer away from the popular methods I see most people using: We've owned a pellet grill which we got rid of after about 6mo, and I literally gave away our gas grill because I found it boring. I just find charcoal to take it to another level, and I don't find it to be particularly inconvenient.

(some halibut fillets with some chinook tail fillet)
My charcoal grill method
I get the briquettes going in the chimney (no lighter fluid here). Dump out and let them breathe/heat up for a bit. I tend to wait on covering them up as that stops the heating.
Meat prep: I like to rub in some umami sea salt (I mix shitake mushroom powder with sea salt that I keep in a mason jar), then baste with a thin layer of mayo. The mayo typically mostly runs off, but it really helps keep the outer layers from drying out. But that's usually it. I don't do a whole bunch of anything else as a well-cared for piece of fish shouldn't need much.
I like a relatively hot grill - start with skin side up to get the meat side started. After a couple minutes, flip over, cover, and let it cook for a few minutes. Covering up will often bring up some extra smoke from the briquettes for that added "something" you can't get on gas.
Now the part most seem to mess up: DON'T OVERCOOK IT! I pull it off when I do a fork test and the thickest part is ALMOST cooked. Take it off the heat at that point and let it rest: Under foil if you prefer, for about 5mins. This is when the cooking finishes. Leaving it to cook all the way through on the grill will leave you with a tougher, dryer, less flavorful chunk of salmon (this is even more true for something like halibut).
That's my base method. Interested to see what others do, even if it goes against my way of thinking


