About a year ago, I published a paper. Since then, through discussions with some colleagues, we have identified several interesting corollaries that can be derived from its results, with only minor adaptations to the proofs. These corollaries appear to be particularly relevant to a scientific community that is relatively distinct from the one targeted by the original paper.
In this context, would it be reasonable to write a new paper presenting these corollaries, highlighting their relevance in this new framework, and submit it to a journal that caters more specifically to this other community?
My main concern is that this might be perceived as "salami slicing," since the proofs rely on very similar arguments to those in the original paper. Are there cases where such papers, building on an earlier work, are considered interesting and legitimate to publish?