Salmon Chirashi Sushi Bowl Recipe: Easy Homemade Salmon Donburi

March is Nutrition Month, and to celebrate I’m sharing a nutritious and flavorful Salmon Sushi Bowl recipe in collaboration with the Marine Stewardship Council.

This post is sponsored by the Marine Stewardship Council. As always, all opinions are my own.

A sushi bowl with salmon, cucumber, avocado and seaweed.

What are Sushi Bowls?

Sushi bowls are a deconstructed sushi roll served in a bowl. They include the same flavors and ingredients you’d find in a roll, but without the rolling and slicing. I like them for satisfying sushi cravings at home—simple to assemble and easy to customize.

Sushi bowls are similar to poke bowls, but there’s a key difference: poke usually features marinated raw fish such as tuna, while sushi bowls can include raw or cooked fish, or be entirely plant-based. Another name for a sushi bowl is chirashi.

For these bowls I used MSC-certified sustainable smoked wild sockeye salmon for great flavor and responsible sourcing.

What is the Marine Stewardship Council?

The Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) is a global nonprofit focused on keeping oceans healthy and ensuring wild seafood remains available for generations. The MSC sets a global standard for sustainable fishing and helps consumers identify seafood that is wild, traceable, and responsibly harvested.

Choosing MSC-certified seafood supports healthier oceans while giving you high-quality ingredients for your meals.

Nutrition Month

March’s Nutrition Month is a timely reminder that seafood is a nutritious, delicious choice to include in weekly meal plans. Seafood offers a lean, protein-packed alternative to red meat and can help lower your dietary carbon footprint.

Seafood is also quick to prepare, which makes it ideal for weeknight dinners. It works well in many preparations such as air-fried salmon, blackened cod, fish stews, grilled kebabs, or lemon-garlic shrimp.

By picking MSC-certified seafood you’re choosing quality ingredients that are better for both your health and the ocean.

A blue and white bowl of rice and sushi ingredients.

Seafood Nutrition Benefits

Seafood provides many nutritional benefits. A typical 3 oz serving supplies a substantial portion of daily protein needs while remaining relatively low in calories—lean fish can be around 100 calories per serving, and even fattier fish often fall near 200 calories.

Seafood is low in saturated fat and rich in heart-healthy polyunsaturated fats, including omega-3 fatty acids. It’s usually low in cholesterol and supplies important vitamins and minerals such as B vitamins, vitamin D, and vitamin A.

How Do You Know it’s Sustainable?

Look for the MSC blue fish label. That mark indicates the product is certified as sustainable, wild-caught, and traceable to its source. Finding certified seafood in stores is straightforward—MSC-labeled products appear in canned, frozen, pouched, and fresh seafood sections across different price points.

The smoked wild sockeye salmon used here is an example of an MSC-certified option, and many other seafood staples—shrimp, scallops, canned fish—are available with the MSC label.

Why You Will Love This Easy Sushi Bowl

These bowls deliver all the sushi flavors without the fuss of rolling. They’re easy to adapt to your preferred rolls, budget-friendly compared with takeout, and perfect for meal prep if you have cooked rice ready to go. Hold the avocado until serving for best texture.

Tips and Variations

  • Use brown rice or cauliflower rice instead of white for a different texture and extra fiber.
  • Swap smoked salmon for crab or imitation crab to create California roll–style bowls, or use crispy shrimp for a tempura-style bowl.
  • Make it vegan by replacing salmon with shiitake mushrooms or marinated tofu.
  • Any spicy mayo works well—replace wasabi with sriracha for a sriracha mayo, or try teriyaki or hoisin for different flavor profiles.
  • Other vegetables to add: cooked sweet potato, shredded carrots, cabbage, asparagus, green onions, or daikon radish.
  • Use gluten-free soy sauce or tamari to keep the dish gluten-free.
Two salmon sushi bowls with chopsticks.

Want More Goodness in a Bowl?

If you enjoy bowls, try other easy bowl recipes like pizza bowls, spicy chicken burrito bowls, or a sweet potato, quinoa and chickpea salad for more meal ideas.

Did you make this recipe? Please leave a rating in the comments and let us know how it turned out. Share any changes you made—we’d love your feedback. Thank you for visiting The Food Blog!

Recipe

A bowl of food with avocado

Salmon Sushi Bowls

Salmon Sushi Bowls are a simple, nutritious, and delicious way to get your sushi fix without going out.
5 from 62 votes

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Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Japanese
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 10 minutes
Servings: 2
Calories: 433kcal
Author: Colleen Milne

Ingredients

Wasabi Mayonnaise

  • 2 tablespoon real mayonnaise
  • 1 tbsp wasabi paste
  • 1 teaspoon rice vinegar

Bowls

  • 1 cup sushi rice cooked and cooled to room temperature
  • 2 sheets of nori (toasted seaweed) dampened
  • 4 oz smoked salmon
  • 1 cup cucumber cut into matchsticks
  • 1 avocado sliced
  • 2 scallions sliced
  • 1 teaspoon black sesame seeds
  • soy sauce

Instructions

Wasabi Mayonnaise

  • Whisk together mayonnaise, wasabi paste, and rice vinegar in a small bowl. Refrigerate until ready to use.

Bowls

  • Divide the cooked rice between two bowls.
  • Dampen nori with cold water and cut into strips. Add nori to each bowl.
  • Roll smoked salmon slices into cigar shapes and arrange in the bowls.
  • Top with avocado, cucumber matchsticks, and sliced scallions.
  • Sprinkle with black sesame seeds and drizzle with wasabi mayonnaise.
  • Serve with soy sauce on the side.

Notes

Any short-grain rice, such as arborio, can be used in place of sushi rice.

Reduce the wasabi paste for a milder sauce, or substitute sriracha if you don’t have wasabi paste.

Use gluten-free soy sauce to make this recipe gluten-free.

Nutrition

Serving: 1serving | Calories: 433kcal | Carbohydrates: 32g | Protein: 15g | Fat: 28g | Saturated Fat: 4g | Cholesterol: 19mg | Sodium: 554mg | Potassium: 753mg | Fiber: 9g | Sugar: 2g | Vitamin A: 364IU | Vitamin C: 18mg | Calcium: 56mg | Iron: 2mg
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