Lomo Saltado

Prep: 15 minutes

Cook: 15 minutes

Lomo Saltado

Walk into any restaurant in Lima—from the fanciest spot in Miraflores to the humblest menu del día joint in a working neighborhood—and you'll find lomo saltado. It's the dish that bridges every class, every occasion, every craving. Whether you're grabbing lunch at a hole-in-the-wall cafeteria or celebrating at a tablecloth restaurant, lomo saltado is there, reliable as gravity.

This is Chinese-Peruvian fusion at its most essential: beef stir-fried fast and hot, tossed with onions and tomatoes, then served over rice with a side of crispy fries. It sounds simple because it is, but that simplicity hides technique that took generations to perfect.

Ingredients

🥩 1½ lbs beef sirloin, cut into strips
🍟 3 large potatoes, cut into thick fries
🧅 2 large red onions, cut into thick strips
🍅 3 Roma tomatoes, cut into wedges
🧄 4 cloves garlic, minced
🌶️ 2 ají amarillo peppers, sliced (or 1 tbsp ají amarillo paste)
🥄 3 tbsp soy sauce
🍶 2 tbsp white vinegar
🫒 3 tbsp vegetable oil (for stir-frying)
🫒 Oil for frying potatoes
🌿 ½ cup fresh cilantro, chopped
🍚 4 cups cooked white rice
🧂 Salt and black pepper to taste

For Chicken Variation:

🍗 1½ lbs chicken breast or thighs, cut into strips

For Seafood Variation:

🦐 1 lb mixed seafood (shrimp, scallops, calamari)

Instructions

Get the fries going first. Cut potatoes into thick batons—not skinny fries, but substantial pieces that can hold their own against the stir-fry. Fry at 350°F until golden and crispy, about 6-8 minutes. Drain and season with salt immediately.

Frying potatoes

Prep everything before you start cooking. This dish moves fast once it hits the pan. Cut beef into finger-thick strips, slice onions into thick crescents, cut tomatoes into wedges. Have your soy sauce and vinegar ready to go.

Get your pan screaming hot. Use the biggest pan or wok you have—you want high heat and space for everything to sear, not steam. Add oil and immediately add the beef. Don't crowd it; work in batches if needed. Let it sear hard for 2-3 minutes before tossing.

Build the stir-fry. Push beef to one side, add garlic and ají amarillo to the empty space. Let them sizzle for 30 seconds, then add onions. Stir everything together and cook for 2 minutes until onions start to soften but still have bite.

Finish with tomatoes and sauce. Add tomato wedges, soy sauce, and vinegar. Toss everything together for another 2 minutes—you want the tomatoes to heat through but not turn to mush. Taste and adjust seasoning.

Stir-fry action

Serve it right. Put rice on one side of the plate, pile the lomo saltado next to it, and nestle the fries alongside. Scatter cilantro over everything and serve immediately while it's all still sizzling.

Variations

Lomo Saltado de Pollo: Use chicken instead of beef. Cut into strips and cook the same way, but watch the timing—chicken cooks faster.

Lomo Saltado Mariscos: Mixed seafood version popular on the coast. Add firmer seafood first (scallops), then softer pieces (shrimp) at the end.

Menu del Día Style: Many neighborhood spots serve it with a fried egg on top and maybe some white beans on the side. Pure comfort food.

Cultural Notes

The Chinese influence comes from the Cantonese immigrants who arrived in Peru in the mid-1800s. They adapted their stir-frying techniques to local ingredients, creating what Peruvians call "chifa" cuisine. Lomo saltado is probably the most successful fusion dish to come out of this cultural exchange.

You'll find it everywhere—from fancy restaurants that charge 3. The technique stays the same, but the quality of ingredients varies wildly. The best versions use good beef, perfectly ripe tomatoes, and potatoes fried to order.

This recipe serves 4 generously, but in Peru it's often shared family-style with extra rice and maybe some beans on the side. It's the kind of dish that brings people together around a table, preferably with an Inca Kola to wash it down.

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