I couldn’t find much on the origins of Beef Salpicao (in other words, too lazy to dig further). But let us use some word play. Salpicao (Portuguese) is a beef or pork sausage flavored with garlic and paprika. Salpicado (salpicar), on the other hand, is a Spanish word that means splatter, sprinkle, dabble or pepper. Since the dish is splattered with lots of garlic, could salpicao be just a derivative of salpicado? I don’t know. You be the judge.
Beef salpicao is very delicious. It is salty and sweet with the smell and taste of garlic. It is as if the flavor was produced by too many spices although salpicao has very few ingredients that are readily available anywhere. It is a quick stir-fry dish with a very simple and uncomplicated cooking process. It is a perfect main dish but is also good as cocktail food, what we call in the Philippines as “pulutan” (appetizer taken with alcohol, like beer).
The recipe calls for beef sirloin cut into 1″ cubes but my meat shop misunderstood my instructions and cut the beef into strips. Nevertheless, it still came out OK.
For stir-frying, I normally use my Lodge cast iron wok because of the even heat distribution. It looks like this:





