Suzanne of the culinary blog Tea and Mangoes and I collaborated on two matambre recipes for carnival this year. Matambre is a classic Argentinian dish, a filled and rolled flank steak. It’s also an awesome portmanteau of mata (kill) and hambre (hunger).
Suzanne’s creativity and background in nutrition sciences come through in her matambre recipe, which uses chorizo, various leafy greens, herbs and spices, and a wine-broth cooking technique.
My version is a tribute to my Argentinian mom, who focused on parsley, cheese and garlic in her filling; and roasted it in the oven. I also got help from the cookpad recipe by Sabor a Mamá.
Jump to RecipeThe cut of meat used for matambre is flank steak or the “fly shaker” muscle of the cow. You can read more about flank steak in this Butcher Magazine article.
Growing up, my mom made matambre on special occasions. We didn’t eat a lot of meat in general, and this dish satisfied my parents’ ethos of spicing and veggifying a somewhat less expensive cut of meat — though the article I mentioned above notes that flank steak’s growing popularity has driven up its price.

Matambre can be roasted in the oven, grilled, or boiled. Once cooked, you can serve it warm or cold. If you decide to eat it later, weigh it down with a heavy plate and refrigerate it so the roll gets tighter. Pair your matambre with a salad, or make a sandwich on a crusty bread roll. You can drizzle chimichurri sauce (recipe also below) over the meat for an extra punch of flavor.

Warm matambre with chimichurri sauce 
Tender next-day matambre
Suzanne and I hope you’ll combine elements from both of our recipes. Let us know in the comments what you made and how you liked it!
Below is the printable matambre recipe, a photo gallery of the process, a video on how to tie up the meat, and a quick classic chimichurri recipe.

Matambre (Argentinian Stuffed Rolled Flank Steak)
Ingredients
Method
- Remove excess fat from the flank steak and butterfly it along the grain. You want your matambre slices to be against the grain for tenderness and chewability.
- If one side of the meat is more fatty, put that side down so it will be on the outside of your roll and browned during cooking.
- Sprinkle the meat with the black pepper and paprika. No salt because of the cheese.
- Make sure your meat is set up so you will be rolling with the grain.
- In a bowl, mix the milk, bread crumbs and 2 raw eggs,
- Chop the parsley by hand or in a food processor and then add it to the paste bowl.
- Finally, process the cheese and garlic in the food processor and then add it to the paste bowl. I like to use block cheese and the food processor is an efficient grater. You can also use pre-grated cheese.
- Spread the paste on the top of the meat.
- Add the slices of pepper and carrot, and the quarters of egg to the top of the parsley paste. Make sure your rows run along the grain.
- Roll the meat along the grain and then follow the YouTube video instructions below for tying a roast.
- Preheat your oven to 375F.
- In a large pan or dutch oven, add 2-3 Tbsp of oil and brown the meat on your stovetop on all four sides, about three minutes each side.
- Cover the pan and put it in the preheated oven. Bake for about 30 minutes.
- Let the meat rest at least 10 minutes before cutting it. Alternatively, transfer the meat to a storage container, weighing it down with a plate if possible, and refrigerate it. You can serve it cold or reheat it the next day.

Prepping ingredients 
Food processed garlic, pecorino romano and half of the parsley 
Mixing in the egg, milk and bread crumbs 
Trimming the fat 
Butterfly the meat along the grain 
Trim uneven edges and sprinkle with black pepper and paprika 
Cover the meat with the cheese-parsley paste 
Lay rows of carrot, pepper and 3 quartered eggs 
Sew up the meat (see video below) 
Tied up, only one casualty-carrot 
Brown all four sides in oil on the stovetop 
Don’t worry about messy ends, they’ll taste amazing 
3-4 minutes per side 
Roast at 375F for 30 minutes 
Finished cooking (rest 10 minutes before slicing)

Chimichurri
Ingredients
Method
- Combine everything in a food processor and pulse. Scrape down the sides, and pulse again until everything is minced and blended.
- Cover, refrigerate and let sit for several hours so the flavors blend.