Beef Lok Lak is one of Cambodia's most beloved dishes and one of the most quietly extraordinary recipes in Southeast Asian food history. A stir-fried beef salad served over fresh lettuce, sliced tomato and cucumber with steamed jasmine rice and a lime and black pepper dipping sauce, it is a dish that documents centuries of cultural exchange in a single plate.
Prep Time 15 minutesmins
Cook Time 15 minutesmins
Marinating Time 30 minutesmins
Ingredients
For the beef and marinade:
1lbsirloinflank steak or beef tenderloin, thinly sliced against the grain into strips or cut into small cubes
2tbspoyster sauce
2tbspsoy sauce
1tspfish sauce
1tspsugar
3clovesgarlicminced
½tspfreshly ground black pepper
1tspcornstarch
2tbspneutral oil for frying
For the stir fry:
1small white onionthinly sliced into rings
2tbspneutral oil
For the plate:
4 to 6large lettuce leaveswashed and dried
2ripe tomatoesthickly sliced
½cucumbersliced
2cupssteamed jasmine rice
2fried eggsone per plate, optional but traditional
For the Kampot pepper dipping sauce:
Juice of 2 fresh limes
1tspfreshly ground black peppercoarsely ground — Kampot pepper if you can find it, standard black pepper if not
½tspsea salt or flaky salt
Optional: small pinch of sugar to balance
Instructions
Marinate the beef
Combine the oyster sauce, soy sauce, fish sauce, sugar, minced garlic, black pepper and cornstarch in a bowl. Add the beef and toss to coat thoroughly. Leave to marinate for at least 30 minutes in the fridge, or up to one hour. The longer the better. Do not skip the cornstarch — it creates the glossy coating that defines the dish.
Make the dipping sauce
Combine the lime juice, coarsely ground black pepper and salt in a small bowl. Stir and taste. It should be sharp, salty, and intensely peppery with the lime cutting through everything. This sauce is not a garnish — it is the centrepiece of the dish. Set aside at room temperature.
Prepare the plates
Lay the lettuce leaves across one side of each plate. Arrange the sliced tomatoes and cucumber alongside. Set the steamed rice in a mound on the other side. This is the traditional presentation and it matters.
Cook the beef
Heat a wok or wide heavy pan over the highest heat your stove produces. Lok Lak requires genuinely high heat to sear rather than steam the meat. Add the oil and let it get smoking hot. Add the marinated beef in a single layer, do not crowd the pan, and leave it completely undisturbed for 30 to 45 seconds to develop a char on the bottom. Then toss aggressively for another 30 seconds. The name Lok Lak, derived from the Vietnamese bo luc lac, literally means shaking beef, and the shaking motion in the wok is the technique. Add the sliced onion rings and toss for a further 30 seconds. The total cooking time should be under 2 minutes. Remove from heat immediately.
Assemble
Spoon the beef directly over the lettuce and tomatoes. If using a fried egg, place it on top of the beef. The fried egg is said to represent the sun in Cambodian tradition. Serve the dipping sauce in a small bowl alongside.
To eat: the traditional method is to pick up a piece of beef wrapped in a lettuce leaf, dip the whole bundle in the lime pepper sauce, and eat it by hand. Then eat the rice and salad alongside, dousing everything in more of the dipping sauce.
Video
Notes
Kampot pepper is worth seeking out if you want the authentic flavour. It has a mild, floral, aromatic quality that standard black pepper does not replicate. It is available online and the difference in the dipping sauce is significant. The Kampot pepper fields were almost entirely destroyed by the Khmer Rouge between 1975 and 1979 when they were converted to rice fields. The pepper's recovery after 1979 is itself a small but meaningful piece of Cambodian food history.
Do not overcook the beef. Lok Lak at its best is medium at most. Overcooked beef in this dish loses everything that makes it worth eating.
The dipping sauce must be made fresh. It does not keep and it cannot be made in advance. Squeeze the limes immediately before serving.