Gordon Ramsay’s Swordfish Was the Peaceful Dinner I Didn’t Know I Needed

Gordon Ramsay’s Swordfish Was the Peaceful Dinner I Didn’t Know I Needed

No music blaring. No timer beeping. No frantic flipping through recipes.
Just me, a quiet kitchen, a piece of swordfish, and the unspoken agreement: tonight, we’re keeping it simple.

This wasn’t about cheffing it up. It was about cooking something pure, without drama. A meal that tasted like standing barefoot on cool tile. Like exhaling.

And Gordon’s way of treating swordfish—clean, confident, no nonsense—was exactly what I needed.

Why This Works (And Where Most Go Wrong)

The Secret Behind This Technique

Where people mess up swordfish:

  • Overmarinate → turns mushy
  • Overcook → dries out like leather
  • Underseason → tastes like sadness

Why Gordon’s method shines:

  • Short marinade – Enough flavor, zero mush
  • High-heat grilling – Locks in juices, gets perfect char
  • Built-in acidity – Lemon + vinegar keeps it bright
  • Soy sauce hit – Adds depth without making it “Asian fusion chaos”
  • Resting after grilling – Gives you a juicy, tender bite every time

Swordfish is steak-like but delicate. It needs confidence, not chaos.

Ingredients That Actually Matter

  • 2 swordfish steaks (170–225g each, 1-inch thick) – Fresh, firm, and not frozen-to-mush
  • 45ml olive oil – Quality if you can swing it
  • 15ml low-sodium soy sauce – Umami magic without over-salting
  • 15ml sherry vinegar (or red wine vinegar) – Sharpens everything
  • 9g minced garlic – Punch and perfume
  • 1 tsp dried oregano – Earthy backbone
  • 2 lemons – One for zest/juice, one for grilling
  • Kosher salt – Essential finisher
  • Fresh parsley or cilantro – Choose your vibe (classic or bold)

How To Make Gordon Ramsay’s Grilled Swordfish (My Calm Version)

Step 1: Make the marinade.
In a bowl, whisk together olive oil, soy sauce, vinegar, minced garlic, oregano, zest, and juice from one lemon.

Step 2: Marinate the fish.
Place swordfish steaks in the marinade. Turn to coat. Let sit for 10–15 minutes, flipping halfway through. No longer—you’re flavoring, not curing.

Step 3: Preheat your grill.
Get it hot. Medium-high heat (375–400°F / 190–204°C). Oil those grates well to avoid sticking.

Step 4: Grill the swordfish.
Place steaks on the grill. Cook for 4–5 minutes per side, flipping once, until the internal temp hits 135°F (57°C). Look for beautiful grill marks but don’t press down—let the heat do its thing.

Step 5: Grill the extra lemon.
Halve the second lemon. Place cut side down on the grill. Char until deeply browned and fragrant.

Step 6: Rest and finish.
Let the swordfish rest 10 minutes off heat. Sprinkle with salt, scatter your fresh herbs, and finish with a squeeze of the smoky grilled lemon.

Gordon Ramsay’s Swordfish Was the Peaceful Dinner I Didn’t Know I Needed
Gordon Ramsay’s Swordfish Was the Peaceful Dinner I Didn’t Know I Needed

What Gordon Ramsay Might Say

“Swordfish is not a bloody tire! Don’t overcook it!”
You’re aiming for firm and juicy, not jerky.

“Season BOTH sides, not just one. It’s a fish, not a diva!”
Simple seasoning all around makes the fish sing without extra effort.

“Grill marks are flavor marks.”
Good char = deeper taste, not just good looks.

What I Got Wrong (And How I Fixed It)

  • Overmarinated once – Turned it soft and weird. Now 10–15 minutes max.
  • Grilled too low once – No sear, just sad pale fish. Now always high heat.
  • Forgot to rest once – All the juices ran out when I sliced. Now I wait. It’s worth it.

Variations That Actually Hold Up

Smart Swaps and Additions

  • No grill? Cast iron pan, high heat, no fear.
  • Other fish options: Tuna steaks, halibut fillets, even thick salmon portions.
  • Craving more heat? Add a pinch of red chili flakes to the marinade.
  • Boost the herbs: Basil or mint alongside parsley/cilantro is stunning.

🚫 Don’t drown the swordfish in sauce after grilling. A little grilled lemon is all it needs.

Pro Tips That Change the Game

  • Use a thermometer. Swordfish is pricey—don’t wing it. 135°F internal temp is perfection.
  • Resting matters. Juices redistribute. No skipping.
  • Char that lemon. It gives depth without needing a heavy sauce.
  • Oil the fish lightly before grilling too—it helps prevent sticking even more.

Storage + Leftover Moves

  • Fridge: Store cooked swordfish tightly wrapped up to 2 days
  • Reheat: Gently in a skillet or oven, but honestly? Best eaten fresh.
  • Leftover power move: Flake into a salad with arugula, feta, and grilled vegetables.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Q: Can I make this without a grill?
A: 100%. Use a very hot cast iron skillet or grill pan.

Q: What other fish work here?
A: Tuna, halibut, thick salmon steaks—any firm fish will hold up.

Q: Is the soy sauce too strong?
A: Nope. It’s subtle and just deepens the flavor. Use low-sodium for control.

Q: Can I marinate longer for more flavor?
A: Please don’t. Swordfish is delicate. Long marinating = mush city.

Try More Recipes:

Gordon Ramsay Grilled Swordfish Recipe (Ava’s Calm Edition)

Recipe by AvaCourse: DinnerCuisine: MediterraneanDifficulty: Easy
Servings

2

servings
Prep time

15

minutes
Cooking time

10

minutes
Calories

215

kcal

Clean, juicy, and kissed with charred lemon, this Gordon Ramsay-inspired swordfish is simple, soulful cooking for the days when you just need dinner to feel like peace

Ingredients

  • 2 swordfish steaks (170–225g each, 1-inch thick)

  • 45ml olive oil

  • 15ml low-sodium soy sauce

  • 15ml sherry or red wine vinegar

  • 9g minced garlic

  • 1 tsp dried oregano

  • 2 medium lemons (1 for zest/juice, 1 for grilling)

  • Kosher salt

  • Fresh parsley or cilantro, chopped (for garnish)

Directions

  • Whisk olive oil, soy sauce, vinegar, garlic, oregano, lemon zest + juice.
  • Marinate swordfish 10–15 minutes, flipping once.
  • Preheat grill to 375–400°F (190–204°C). Oil grates.
  • Grill swordfish 4–5 minutes per side, to 135°F internal.
  • Grill halved lemon cut-side down until charred.
  • Rest fish 10 minutes. Garnish with salt, herbs, and grilled lemon juice.

Notes

  • Use a thermometer. Swordfish is pricey—don’t wing it. 135°F internal temp is perfection.
  • Resting matters. Juices redistribute. No skipping.
  • Char that lemon. It gives depth without needing a heavy sauce.
  • Oil the fish lightly before grilling too—it helps prevent sticking even more.