Sweet and Salty Grilled Steak With Cucumber Salad Recipe (2024)

By Melissa Clark

Sweet and Salty Grilled Steak With Cucumber Salad Recipe (1)

Total Time
25 minutes, plus at least 30 minutes' marinating
Rating
5(3,341)
Notes
Read community notes

The marinade on this steak is inspired by a classic Vietnamese dipping sauce called nuoc cham. Since it consists mostly of pantry staples – Asian fish sauce, brown sugar and garlic – all you need to pick up on the way home are some fresh limes and jalapeño. Nuoc cham works as a salad dressing, too. Here we drizzle it on crisp cucumbers and radishes, but sliced ripe tomatoes work just as well. You could serve it as it is with the salad on the side, or put everything on top of a bed of rice noodles or rice for a more substantial meal.

Featured in: Vietnamese Marinated Flank Steak

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Ingredients

Yield:4 to 6 servings

  • ½cup fish sauce
  • 1tablespoon packed lime zest
  • cup fresh lime juice (from about 3 limes)
  • 2tablespoons dark brown sugar
  • 2garlic cloves, grated or minced
  • 1large jalapeño, seeds and veins removed if desired, minced
  • 1flank steak, about 1½ pounds
  • 1small seedless English cucumber, thinly sliced
  • 1large bunch of radishes, thinly sliced
  • 4scallions, thinly sliced
  • 1teaspoon vegetable, peanut or olive oil (optional)
  • Cooked rice noodles or rice, for serving (optional)
  • Sesame seeds or crushed roasted peanuts, for serving (optional)
  • Fresh mint leaves or cilantro, for serving (optional)

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (6 servings)

279 calories; 11 grams fat; 4 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 5 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 17 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 6 grams sugars; 27 grams protein; 1966 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Sweet and Salty Grilled Steak With Cucumber Salad Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    In a small bowl, combine the fish sauce, lime zest, lime juice, brown sugar, garlic and jalapeño. Pour ½ of the mixture over the flank steak and let marinate at room temperature for at least 30 minutes (or refrigerate for up to 24 hours). Let meat come to room temperature before cooking if necessary.

  2. Step

    2

    Combine the cucumber, radishes and scallions. Pour in just enough of the marinade sauce to coat.

  3. Light the grill or heat the broiler to high. Pat steak dry with paper towels.

  4. Step

    4

    If grilling, cook until done to taste, about 3 minutes per side for rare. If broiling, heat a 10-inch skillet over high heat for 5 minutes. Add oil to pan and sear the meat for 2 minutes. Flip meat and immediately transfer pan directly to top shelf of oven and broil for 2 to 3 minutes for rare, or longer for more well-done meat. Transfer steak to a cutting board and let rest for 10 minutes covered in foil.

  5. Step

    5

    Thinly slice steak and serve over cooked rice noodles or rice if desired, and top with the cucumber salad. Garnish with sesame seeds and plenty of herbs if using and serve with remaining marinade as a sauce.

Ratings

5

out of 5

3,341

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

Carol Spangler

I figured the longer I marinate, the better. Wrong. I marinated the beef for 24 hours. We grilled it as suggested but it was disappointingly tough. We figured that the lime "cooked" the beef. Strongly recommend marinating for much shorter time -- maybe an hour or two.

Stu

The photo looks like the meat was sliced more or less with the grain instead of across it. Flank steak should be thinly sliced straight across the grain to be edible. I usually use some finely grated fresh ginger in the marinade to help tenderize the meat.

Tweek the marinade

I added some ginger and sesame oil to the marinade and thought it was better.

jvh503

I think the salad would have been fresher tasting with a rice wine vinegar-based dressing.

Ari

Made this for a unique Christmas eve dinner for the family!

Everyone loved it and I'll be sure to be making it again!

Used red boat fish sauce, but would recommend going a little lighter on the fish sauce than the 1/2 cup and adding another half tablespoon brown sugar.

Steve Abbott

I cut back to 1/3 cup fish sauce and used only a few tbsp of marinade as a flavoring on the salad, using primarily rice wine vinegar and olive oil. The cucumber salad had cherry tomatoes as well as a lettuce base and was served on top of rice noodles in a bowl with flank steak on top. Really yummy!

Audrey

So, the reason why nearly every commenter thinks this recipe is "too salty"--is because it is a "variation" of nuoc cham. A traditional nuoc cham also has water added. Try adding water at a 3:1 ratio (water to fish sauce), and this will yield the dressing you want for your salad. I'd keep the marinade as is though, as water would only impede the action of the salt and other flavors, and you'll have a bland steak. Lastly, please don't reserve the used marinade for dipping. (That's unsanitary.)

Saima

Based on the notes of a few other commenters, I adjusted the recipe slightly, adding only 1/3 c. fish sauce, 3 1/2 tbsp brown sugar and a splash of both sesame oil and rice vinegar. It tasted divine, and I will definitely make it again.

Botany Boy

I come at this from the Thai side with Neua Num Doke in which the thinly sliced meat is quickly seared in a hot dry wok to give charred rare-ish meat which is then marinated briefly in a similar sauce but with far less sugar. Serve over mixed salad dressed in the same sauce. Eat meat and salad with steamed rice. If you are grilling or want rare meat, grill the steak, slice thinly and dump into the marinade for a little while. Heap onto a salad on a plate letting the juice run over everything.

LalaK

My whole family loved this dish. My son asked if we had enough for leftovers. I added a tablespoon of ginger and some sesame oil to the marinade as suggested in comments, and marinated it for about 6 hours. I served it with risotto with mushrooms and - random combination, but really good. Next time, I will serve with some warmed tortillas for the kids.

Steve

Maybe the limes I had were juicier or tarter, but I found that adding appro. 1 1/2 more tsp. brown sugar made the taste more balanced.

mzhungry

I normally love Melissa Clark's recipes but this one just isn't in the same league as most of hers & I've now made it twice, painstakingly following all the directions. The marinade, which is the key player here in pulling everything together, just didn't make the grade. Maybe too sour - not sure but it didn't have that drink it straight from the bowl deliciousness that I associate with a good marinade/dipping sauce/ salad dressing. Also thought proportion of radishes to cucumbers was off.

Monica D

Another use for the leftover marinade is as a sauce for spiralized carrots and daikon radish - you can add tofu and a few herbs and you've got lunch the next day!

Connie Welch

I used a flatiron steak and marinated overnight. Followed the dressing recipe but cut the fish sauce almost in half (Red Boat). Broiled flatiron steak sliced and served over mixed baby greens with the advised cucumbers and a bit of cilantro and dressed with reserved marinade. Super delicious.

rumpole

Yes. It totally works. Cook in the marinade @ 129, towel off, then sear.

Smunter

While the flavors are good, I agree with others that this came out a little saltier than I'd like. I added low sodium soy sauce, lime juice and rice vinegar to the marinade, will adjust the ratios and maybe cut the marinating time in half next time.

Jacci

Has anyone tried this sous vide? I live in a downtown loft so we don't have a great vent fan and aren't allowed to bar-b-que on our balconies due to the fire code. I'm thinking to sous vide and sear on the stove top.

rumpole

Yes. It totally works. Cook in the marinade @ 129, towel off, then sear.

Connie Welch

I used a flatiron steak and marinated overnight. Followed the dressing recipe but cut the fish sauce almost in half (Red Boat). Broiled flatiron steak sliced and served over mixed baby greens with the advised cucumbers and a bit of cilantro and dressed with reserved marinade. Super delicious.

Ritch

I used this marinade with leftover eye of round roast, which I sliced into strips, marinated overnight, tossed with pad Thai rice noodles, cucumbers and radishes and served it colder than revenge. Since the roast was cooked, the marinade could be used as the dressing. It was great, but I agree with the comment that it didn’t need to be marinated overnight, as the more time it spent with the jalapeños (I did include a number of seeds) it got a lot spicier.

Khai

The salad tasted good, but the fish sauce lingered for a while. The meat was too chewy even though I have full real strong teeth.

Barbara

Meat was tough after marinating for 6 hrs in fridge. Marinade just ok. Do not make again.

Chris B

Made marinade exactly as specified, added all of it to the flank steak (1.8lbs) as half didn’t seem enough and I didn’t make the cucumber salad. Marinaded for 24 hours. Came out perfect on the grill, loved it.

Steve Haner

Grilled 1-3/4 pound flank last night and I and my wife and son enjoyed the final result. The only adjustment to the recipe I made was to add a couple tablespoons of soy sauce to the marinade. Marinated for over 20 hours in fridge before grilling. Rice noodles sautéed with peanut sauce and 2 scrambled eggs however tended to stick together. Next time I would probably tenderize the steak and will add some vegetable oil to the boiled water. Otherwise a fun dish and pretty easy to prepare.

Audrey

So, the reason why nearly every commenter thinks this recipe is "too salty"--is because it is a "variation" of nuoc cham. A traditional nuoc cham also has water added. Try adding water at a 3:1 ratio (water to fish sauce), and this will yield the dressing you want for your salad. I'd keep the marinade as is though, as water would only impede the action of the salt and other flavors, and you'll have a bland steak. Lastly, please don't reserve the used marinade for dipping. (That's unsanitary.)

sally

My partner is iffy about fish sauce so I reduced it by 1/3 and compensated with soy sauce. Then his mom dropped by and he ended up having to take her out for dinner and I enjoyed it alone, immensly

Alice

Juice of 3 lemons used...maybe more next time?

Bob

My family loved this and it was incredibly easy to make. I swapped kaffir lime zest for the store bought limes and Thai scud peppers for the jalapeno and it lifted things up a notch. I also used slightly less than a 1/2 cup of the fish sauce and a bit more sugar and added ginger to the marinade and grape tomatoes to the salad. Make sure to taste the marinade and adjust sugar as needed. It may be hard to find whole kaffir limes in the store but if you can, it adds a ton of flavor and aroma.

Bob

Tried it the same way again and replaced the brown sugar with palm sugar - perfect!

Jim

I've done this at least twice now with rice and rice noodles. Either way it received rave reviews here. Followed the recipe and marinated overnight; grilled to medium rare. Cucumber salad added additional layers of flavor that went well with the meat. A keeper and do again...and again...!

Bernice

I have tried this recipe twice and it was the first time I was really disappointed with Melissa Clark. It' incredibly salty! There is not enough balance in this dish. There are tons of other great ways to marinate a steak compared to this one. Really disappointing.

Bob

This is a very effective and popular method of marinating that is widely used in Southeast Asian cooking. Fish sauce is very very salty and overpowering if not countered with sweet and sour. If it's too salty, add more sugar (and less fish sauce to begin with). I have to taste and tweak several times but when it's correct, all the flavors are in perfect balance and you can't stop eating it.

Heidi Bliss

Didn't love this. There was a flavor that was too overpowering for me, maybe it was the fish sauce. I did like the contrast of the cucumber and radish salad with the steak. I may try that again with a slightly different sauce.

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Sweet and Salty Grilled Steak With Cucumber Salad Recipe (2024)
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