1 jalapeƱo or Thai red bird’s eye chili, seeded and minced
2 T brown sugar, packed
1 t red pepper flakes
2 green onions, thinly sliced on the diagonal
1/4 cup sunflower oil
2 pounds flank steak
4 ounces uncooked rice noodles such as pad thai noodles
8 ounces fresh spinach
4 ounces arugula
A handful of fresh mint
A handful of fresh basil (Thai basil if you can get it)
1 red pepper, seeded and julienned
5 radishes, thinly sliced
3 Persian cucumbers, thinly sliced
2 mangos, peeled and thinly sliced (preferably ataulfo or Manilla)
Instructions
To make marinade and dressing mix first 9 ingredients together in a small bowl. Slowly whisk in the sunflower oil. Transfer 1/3 cup of the mixture to a separate container, refrigerate and reserve for salad dressing. Add the juice of one more lime to the remaining mixture in the bowl and mix. This will be used to marinate the steak.
Tenderize the flank steak by pounding with a mallet on both sides. Put steak in a ziplock plastic bag and add marinade. Squeeze the air out of the bag and seal. Squish the meat and dressing around to ensure the meat is fully coated in the dressing. Allow to marinate in the fridge at least 3 hours.
Cook rice noodles according to package directions. Drain, rinse and reserve.
Prepare a medium-hot grill. Remove steak from marinade and salt and pepper both sides. Grill to medium rare, about 4-5 minutes on each side. Remove the steak from the grill and let rest 10 minutes before slicing. Slice in thin slices perpendicular to the grain, cutting down at an angle (as opposed to straight up and down.)
Spread spinach and arugula across a large serving platter. Scatter all but 6 leaves each of the mint and basil on top of the lettuce. Reserve these for final garnish.
If the noodles are sticking together, rinse again and shake well to remove as much moisture as possible. Scatter the noodles on top of the lettuce. Lay the steak slices on top of the noodles and down the middle of the serving platter. Arrange the vegetables and the mango around the edges of the platter. Roll the remaining mint and basil leaves into a cigar shape and snip thin slices with kitchen sheers or chop with a knife. Scatter sliced herbs across top of salad platter. Drizzle dressing over salad.
As an alternative to the arranged salad platter, you can toss all the ingredients together. This is easier and insures everything is well dressed, but not as attractive a presentation. Your choice.