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Chinese · Side

Sesame Cucumber Salad

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Sesame Cucumber Salad

About this recipe

Chinese cuisine is regional rather than singular — the spice of Sichuan, the soy-and-ginger of Cantonese, the wheat dumplings of the north. A few foundational techniques (wok hei, double-cooking, the brine-then-roast cycle for meats) cross every regional line.

As a side dish, Sesame Cucumber Salad is designed to support a main course rather than command attention — built around vegetables, grains, or pulses with seasoning that lifts rather than dominates.

Set your servings in the scaler above and every line of the recipe rewrites itself with smart fractions and unit promotion. Open Cook Mode to step through it hands-free with timers running.

Curated by the ScaleRecipe editorial teamReviewed

Recipe data is sourced from TheMealDB's open community database; ScaleRecipe handles the curation, the scaling math, the editorial commentary, and the conversion utilities woven into each page.

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Method

  1. Prep the cucumbers:
  2. Peel the cucumbers. Cut them into quarters, lengthwise. (If the seeds are bitter, scrape out the seeds and discard.) Cut the cucumbers again, crosswise, into 1/2-inch thick pieces.
  3. Toss the salad:
  4. Place cucumbers into a serving bowl. Sprinkle with salt. Toss with sesame oil, seasoned rice vinegar, basil (if using), and chili flakes. Sprinkle with toasted sesame seeds if using.

Cooking notes

Scaling works best when you weigh ingredients rather than measure by volume — small differences in packing can compound at higher multipliers.

For volume-to-weight conversions of any ingredient — flour, sugar, butter, salts — use the ingredient converter. To translate the recipe's oven temperature between °C, °F and gas mark, see the temperature converter.

When you scale this recipe up or down, remember that cooking time does not scale linearly. A doubled cake takes longer, but not twice as long; a doubled soup takes roughly twice as long. The cooking-time guide gives sensible starting estimates by dish geometry.

Scaling notes

Scaling Sesame Cucumber Salad

Sesame Cucumber Salad is written for around four servings as it stands on this page — scaling it up for a party or down for a meal-for-one is the small math problem most home cooks face every week. Here's how this particular dish responds to scaling, what changes linearly, and what doesn't.

Side dishes scale more predictably than most categories. Sesame Cucumber Salad cooks in roughly the same time at 1× and 2× because sheet-pan or sauté geometry doesn't change with batch size — only the depth of the layer does. Adjust seasoning by 1.5× when doubling, and watch the pan capacity: crowding a roasting tray means steaming, not browning.

Skip the math entirely — ScaleRecipe's scaler rewrites every ingredient line above with proper culinary fractions and smart unit promotion the moment you change the serving count. Open the scaler →

Beyond the recipe

Substitutions & make-ahead — Sesame Cucumber Salad

If you're cooking Sesame Cucumber Salad for a future meal (or doubling up for leftovers), here's how this dish handles storage, reheating, and the timing decisions most recipes don't spell out.

Make-ahead, storage, and reheating

Side dishes vary widely in their make-ahead tolerance. Sesame Cucumber Salad keeps well refrigerated if it's a roast, grain, or pulse dish — though roasted vegetables especially benefit from a hot-oven reheat (425 °F / 220 °C) to recapture some of their browned crispness. Microwaving makes them mushy. Mashed potatoes and creamed grains need a splash of milk or broth on reheating. Vinaigrette-dressed salads dress at serving time; mayonnaise-based salads benefit from overnight rest.

Recipe video

Sesame Cucumber Salad

Go deeper

Where this recipe sits in the wider tradition.

Each guide below is a real essay on the cuisine or the category — pillars, staples, techniques worth learning — paired with a curated grid of recipes filed under it.

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