This Sechuan spicy smashed cucumber salad is the kind of side dish that disappears while you’re “just tasting to adjust the seasoning.” It’s cold and crisp, loaded with garlicky chili oil, sesame aroma, and a tangy bite that keeps pulling you back in. The smash-and-drain step is the secret—it keeps the cucumbers snappy and lets the dressing infuse into every piece instead of pooling at the bottom. If you like Sichuan-style flavors, you’re going to make this on repeat.
Ingredients
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1 large English cucumber (or 2 small cucumbers), about 350 g
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3 garlic cloves, smashed then finely chopped
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Salt, to taste
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1/4 tsp sugar (optional, helps balance vinegar + heat)
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1 tbsp toasted sesame oil
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1 tbsp light soy sauce (optional, for deeper savoriness)
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1 tsp black vinegar (optional, for that classic tang)
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1–2 tsp chili oil (or chili crisp), to taste
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1–2 tsp black sesame seeds, for topping
Instructions
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Prep the cucumber
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Rinse well. For English cucumber, peel just a few strips of skin (leave some on for crunch and color).
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For smaller cucumbers, simply trim the ends.
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Smash it
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Place the cucumber on a cutting board.
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Use the flat side of a large knife (or a rolling pin) and give it a few firm hits until it splits and looks “cracked.”
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Cut into bite-size chunks (rough pieces are perfect).
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Salt first (this prevents watery salad)
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Add cucumbers to a bowl. Sprinkle with salt and the sugar (if using).
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Toss and let sit 10 minutes so extra water releases.
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Drain
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Pour off the liquid in the bowl (this keeps the dressing bold instead of diluted).
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Dress it
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Add chopped garlic, sesame oil, and chili oil (or chili crisp). Toss well.
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For a stronger Sichuan-style flavor, add soy sauce + black vinegar.
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Finish
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Sprinkle black sesame seeds on top right before serving.
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Taste and adjust: more salt, a little more vinegar, or a touch more chili oil.
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Serve cold
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Best after 10–20 minutes in the fridge, but it’s great immediately too.
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Save this to Pinterest (image below). You’ll want it the next time you need something fresh and spicy.
Tips & Tricks for the Best Smashed Cucumber Salad
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Smash, don’t just slice. You’re not trying to pulverize the cucumber—just crack it so it splits and gets those rough edges that grab onto the dressing.
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Salt first, always. Tossing the cucumbers with salt for 10 minutes pulls out extra water. If you skip this, the salad tastes great for 2 minutes… then turns watery.
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Drain well (but don’t squeeze). Pour off the liquid after salting. A gentle press with a spoon is fine. Over-squeezing makes the cucumbers limp.
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Peel in stripes, not all the way. English cucumbers are great as-is, but peeling a few strips removes any tough skin while keeping crunch and color.
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Use toasted sesame oil, not plain. Toasted sesame oil is what gives that “restaurant smell” the moment you toss it.
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Chili oil heat varies a lot. Start with 1 tsp, taste, then add more. Some chili oils are mild; some are sneaky-hot.
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Black vinegar is the difference-maker. If you have it, use it. It adds that deep, slightly sweet tang that makes the salad taste “Sichuan-style,” not just spicy.
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Add garlic after draining. Garlic + salt sitting too long can taste harsh. Mix it in once the cucumbers are drained so it stays fresh and punchy.
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Black sesame seeds go on last. Sprinkle right before serving so they stay crisp and don’t get lost in the liquid.
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Let it chill 10–20 minutes if you can. The flavor gets better fast, but the cucumbers stay crunchy because you drained them first.
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Want the real Sichuan “tingle”? Add a pinch of ground Sichuan peppercorn (or crush a few whole ones). It shouldn’t taste peppery—just bright and slightly numbing.






