Viral Cucumber Salad (Smashed Cucumber — Chinese Origin Method)
China — Sichuan cold dish tradition, pai huang gua; viral on TikTok globally 2022–2023
Smashed cucumber salad went viral on TikTok in 2022 and 2023, with the percussive act of smashing cucumbers with a cleaver or rolling pin driving enormous engagement. But the technique — pai huang gua in Mandarin — is a staple of Sichuan and broader Chinese cuisine, particularly as a cold side dish or appetiser. The viral moment accurately captured a genuine technique, not a gimmick: smashing creates an irregular surface with crevices that absorb dressing far more effectively than sliced cucumber, and the mechanical action partially breaks down the cell walls, producing a crunchy yet yielding texture.
The correct method uses seedless or Persian cucumbers — English cucumbers work but have a higher water content that dilutes the dressing. The cucumber is smashed with the flat side of a cleaver or the base of a heavy pan applied with firm, quick strikes until it cracks and splits along natural fault lines. It is then roughly chopped into irregular pieces of 3–5cm, tossed with salt, and allowed to drain for 15–20 minutes in a colander. This salting step — often skipped in viral versions — is critical: it purges excess moisture that would otherwise dilute the dressing.
The classic Sichuan dressing is a balance of soy sauce, black rice vinegar (Chinkiang vinegar), sesame oil, chilli oil, sugar, and minced garlic. The vinegar element must be present — without acid, the dressing is flat and the cucumber is merely oily. Crushed Sichuan peppercorns add the characteristic ma la (numbing-spicy) dimension that defines the Sichuan version.
The viral adaptations that substitute balsamic, lemon juice, or Italian seasoning are valid fusion departures but should not be confused with the original. For the authentic version, the Chinkiang vinegar is not optional.