Smashed Cucumber, Avocado and Shrimp Salad
Updated Oct. 12, 2023

- Total Time
- 40 minutes
- Prep Time
- 10 minutes
- Cook Time
- 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1pound English, Persian or Kirby cucumbers, rinsed and dried
- ¼teaspoon fine sea or table salt, more to taste
- ¼teaspoon granulated sugar
- 2tablespoons soy sauce
- 1½tablespoons olive oil
- 3teaspoons toasted sesame oil
- 1teaspoon chile crisp, more to taste
- 1pound large shrimp, peeled and deveined if you like
- 2large ripe avocados
- 2tablespoons rice wine vinegar, more to taste
- 2scallions, thinly sliced
- 2teaspoons toasted white sesame seeds, for garnish (optional)
- ¼cup chopped cilantro, for garnish
Preparation
- Step 1
Cut cucumbers crosswise into pieces about 4 inches long. Cut each piece in half lengthwise. Place each cucumber piece cut side down. Lay the blade of a large knife on top of the cucumbers and, with your other hand, push down lightly to crack the cucumber skins and break down their flesh (or use a rolling pin to lightly smack the cucumbers). Break (or slice) into bite-size pieces. (Ragged is good here; it helps the flesh absorb the dressing.)
- Step 2
Add cucumber to a colander, and toss with salt and sugar. Let sit for 15 to 30 minutes, or until the pieces have released their moisture. Toss a couple of times while draining.
- Step 3
Meanwhile, in a medium bowl, whisk together 1 tablespoon soy sauce, olive oil, 2 teaspoons sesame oil and the chile crisp. Set aside.
- Step 4
Cook the shrimp: In a large skillet over medium heat, combine shrimp with 1 tablespoon water, remaining 1 tablespoon soy sauce and 1 teaspoon sesame oil. Cover the pan and let the shrimp steam until pink and just cooked, 3 to 4 minutes, adding more water, 1 tablespoon at a time, if the pan looks dry. Use a slotted spoon to transfer the shrimp to the bowl with the chile crisp dressing and toss well.
- Step 5
Pit and peel the avocados. Cut flesh into ½-inch pieces. Add to a large bowl and toss with the rice wine vinegar until well coated. Add the drained cucumbers, tossing gently to combine.
- Step 6
Add the shrimp and all of its dressing and the scallions to the cucumber and avocado mixture. Stir gently until combined and the avocado begins to break down and look creamy, but some pieces still remain intact. Taste and add more rice wine vinegar and salt, if needed. Garnish with sesame seeds and cilantro.
- You don’t need to peel or seed thin-skinned cucumbers. But the waxed, thick-skinned cucumbers often found in supermarkets are best peeled and seeded.
Private Notes
Comments
Chili crisp is fried red chili flakes in oil with seasonings that very by brand. The standard Chinese brand, found in most Asian/Chinese markets, is LaoGanMa. Many Chinese American chefs in the U.S. are selling their own versions, which are all very tasty. It isn't super hot usually, but adds zing. You can order all kinds of brands online. It seems to be the hot food/recipe ingredient of 2023.
Momofuku ( David Chang) has excellent chili crisp including regular, hot honey and truffle that you can order online. Also excellent soy sauce, tamari, toasted sesame oil, rice vinegar, salts and noodles. Highly recommend
1. Chili crisp is not the same as using any sort of chili seasoning. Basic versions aren't spicy so much as deeply savory with a little kick. Others here have shared info about good brands. 2. The sugar & salt are tossed with the cukes to help draw out the moisture, so you don't have a watery salad. You could just use salt, but then you'd be tasting salty cuke, which isn't what you want in this recipe. Also, it's 1/4 tsp. That's not gonna kill you.
I have now prepared this transcendent dish on two separate occasions, both within the same fleeting calendar week, accompanied by my cherished counterpart. During the inaugural attempt, fate denied us a viable avocado, compelling us instead toward a golden, sun-drenched mango—an unexpected substitution that elevated the experience into the realm of culinary ecstasy. The confluence of textures, the euphoric contrast of sweet and savory, the near-mystical harmony achieved—it bordered on metaphysical. On our second expedition, set against the serene backdrop of a temperate June evening, we followed the original blueprint, omitting the mango. While still pleasurable, the composition lacked the sublime equilibrium of its predecessor. The flavors, once in perfect symphony, now merely conversed. The verdict is unequivocal: incorporate mango. It transforms this meal from memorable to mythological.
This was wonderful. I followed the recipe exactly…wish I had had Persian cucumbers, but alas, only the others. Isn’t it wonderful to look in your fridge to find you have all the ingredients you need to pull together a 5-star dinner???? And the avocados were two days off a friend’s tree, flown in person from CA….they were mahvelous!
Delish. I’d serve it in butter lettuce cups next time with jalapeno corn muffins.
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