New recipes every day — Follow on Pinterest to never miss one ✦
Blackstone Garlic Steak Bites and Potatoes
Home Dinner Recipes Blackstone Garlic Steak Bites and Potatoes
Dinner Recipes

Blackstone Garlic Steak Bites and Potatoes

Prep Time 15 min
Cook Time 20 min
Servings 4

Blackstone Garlic Steak Bites and Potatoes

Blackstone garlic steak bites and potatoes come out with the kind of contrast that keeps people hovering by the griddle: crisp-edged potatoes, juicy steak, and garlic butter pooling into every little gap. The potatoes pick up a deep golden crust before the steak goes on, and that order matters because it keeps the meat from overcooking while the potatoes finish properly. When everything gets tossed in butter and garlic at the end, you get a glossy finish instead of greasy heaviness.

The key is heat control and spacing. A crowded griddle will steam the potatoes before they brown, and steak cubes tossed onto a wet or cool surface will gray out instead of sear. I use sirloin because it stays tender without needing a long cook, and baby potatoes because they hold their shape and get creamy inside without falling apart. The garlic goes in at the end for a reason: it perfumes the butter without burning and turning bitter.

Below, I’ll show you the timing that keeps both parts on track, plus a few swaps that still give you that same steakhouse-style finish on the griddle.

The potatoes got those crispy browned sides I never get in a skillet, and the garlic butter coated everything without burning. My husband kept picking out the steak bites straight off the griddle.

★★★★★— Jenna R.

Save these Blackstone garlic steak bites and potatoes for the nights when you want crispy potatoes, tender steak, and garlic butter all in one pass on the griddle.

Save to Pinterest

The Reason the Potatoes Go First on the Griddle

The most common mistake with steak bites and potatoes is trying to cook both at the same pace. Potatoes need a head start because they need time to soften all the way through before they can brown. Steak cubes, on the other hand, cook fast and dry out fast. If you start them together, the steak finishes overcooked while the potatoes are still chalky in the center.

Giving the potatoes 12 to 15 minutes first builds texture in layers: tender inside, browned outside, then steak added later so it stays juicy. The other piece people miss is spacing. These potatoes need contact with the hot griddle, not a pile of overlapping halves. If they steam, they never get that good crust.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dish

Blackstone Garlic Steak Bites and Potatoes garlic butter steak bites
  • Sirloin steak — Sirloin is tender enough for a quick griddle cook and still holds up when cut into cubes. Ribeye works if you want a richer bite, but it will render more fat, so watch for flare-ups and don’t overcook it.
  • Baby potatoes — Halved baby potatoes give you flat surfaces that brown beautifully. Bigger potato chunks can work, but they need a longer cook and more turning to soften evenly.
  • Butter — This is the finish that pulls everything together. It adds body and helps the garlic cling to the steak and potatoes instead of sliding off the griddle.
  • Garlic — Fresh garlic is worth using here because it perfumes the butter fast and gives you that sharp, savory hit. Jarred garlic can taste flat and a little watery in a dish that depends on quick, clean flavor.
  • Paprika — Paprika adds a warm color and a mild background note that helps the potatoes taste seasoned all the way through. Smoked paprika works too if you want a deeper, woodsy edge.

Building the Sear Before the Garlic Butter Goes On

Getting the Potatoes Golden

Heat the Blackstone to medium-high before anything touches it, then add the oil and spread the potatoes cut-side down in a single layer. Leave them alone long enough to form color; if you keep stirring, they release steam and stay pale. You’re looking for browned edges and a fork that slides in with a little resistance, not mush. If they start sticking, they’re usually not ready to turn yet.

Cooking the Steak Without Drying It Out

Move the potatoes to the side and give the steak cubes their own space on the hot surface. Season them just before they hit the griddle so the salt doesn’t pull out moisture too early. Let them sear, then turn them occasionally until they’re done to your liking; overworking them makes the outside tough before the center is ready. Sirloin is best served a little pink in the middle, because it stays tender instead of getting chewy.

Finishing With Garlic Butter

Once the steak and potatoes are cooked, add the butter and garlic to the griddle and toss everything through it fast. Garlic burns quickly on direct heat, so this is a short finish, not a slow simmer. The butter should foam and coat the food, not pool in a greasy puddle. As soon as the garlic smells fragrant and the food looks glossy, pull it off and garnish with parsley.

Three Ways to Adjust This Without Losing the Griddle Finish

Dairy-Free Version With Olive Oil

Swap the butter for a little more olive oil plus a drizzle of dairy-free butter substitute at the end if you want that richer finish. You’ll lose a bit of the classic garlic-butter roundness, but the steak and potatoes will still get coated and glossy.

Use Yukon Golds Instead of Baby Potatoes

Yukon Golds make a great swap if that’s what you have. Cut them into 1-inch pieces so they cook at the same pace as the steak bites, and expect a creamier center with a slightly less crisp exterior.

Make It Spicier With Red Pepper Flakes

Add a pinch of red pepper flakes with the garlic if you want heat without changing the structure of the dish. This gives the butter a little bite, which works nicely against the sweet, browned potatoes.

Meal-Prep Friendly Reheat Plan

This dish stores well for quick lunches or another dinner later in the week, though the potatoes will soften a bit in the fridge. Reheat leftovers in a hot skillet or back on the griddle so the surfaces crisp up again; the microwave will warm them, but it also makes the potatoes soft and the steak a little tired.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The potatoes will lose some crispness, but the flavor stays strong.
  • Freezer: It freezes, but the potatoes turn mealy and the steak can toughen after thawing, so I don’t recommend it.
  • Reheating: Reheat in a hot skillet or on the griddle over medium heat until warmed through. Avoid a long microwave reheat, which pushes the steak past tender and makes the potatoes soggy.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use a different cut of steak?+

Yes. Ribeye gives you a richer, more tender bite, and strip steak also works well if you cube it evenly. Avoid tough cuts that need a long cook, because the griddle method here is fast and those cuts won’t have time to soften.

How do I keep the steak bites tender on the Blackstone?+

Use a hot griddle and don’t overcrowd the steak cubes. A crowded surface steams the meat, and overcooking it by even a minute or two can turn sirloin chewy. Pull it as soon as it reaches the doneness you like and let the butter finish the flavor, not the cooking.

Can I prep the potatoes ahead of time?+

Yes, you can halve the potatoes and store them in cold water for a few hours ahead of cooking. Drain and dry them well before they hit the griddle, because wet potatoes steam instead of browning.

How do I know when the potatoes are done?+

They should be golden on the cut sides and easy to pierce with a fork. If the fork still meets resistance in the center, keep cooking them before the steak goes on, since the steak won’t stay on the heat long enough to fix undercooked potatoes.

Blackstone Garlic Steak Bites and Potatoes

Blackstone garlic steak bites and potatoes with golden, pan-crisped halves and tender 1-inch steak cubes, all tossed in garlic butter. Cook everything on a griddle so the butter pools and coats for a fast, easy dinner.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 35 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 650

Ingredients
  

Steak and potatoes
  • 1.5 lb sirloin steak Cut into 1-inch cubes.
  • 1.5 lb baby potatoes Halved.
  • 5 tbsp butter
  • 8 garlic Minced (about 8 cloves).
  • 3 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 tsp paprika
  • 0.5 Salt and pepper to taste Use to season.
  • 1 Fresh parsley, chopped For garnish.

Equipment

  • 1 cast iron skillet

Method
 

Cook potatoes on the griddle
  1. Heat the Blackstone griddle to medium-high and add 2 tablespoons oil, letting it shimmer. Visual cue: the surface should look glossy and lightly sizzling.
  2. Season the potato halves with salt, pepper, and paprika, then place cut-side down on the griddle. Cook for 12-15 minutes, until golden and tender, flipping as needed for even browning.
Cook steak and toss in garlic butter
  1. Move the potatoes to the side and add the remaining oil to the griddle, keeping the heat on medium-high. Visual cue: oil collects in a small slick near the center.
  2. Season the steak cubes with salt and pepper and spread them out to cook in a single layer. Cook for 6-8 minutes, turning occasionally, until they reach your desired doneness.
  3. Add butter and garlic to the griddle and toss steak and potatoes in the garlic butter. Continue tossing just until the garlic is fragrant and everything looks evenly coated, with butter pooling on the surface.
Serve
  1. Garnish with fresh parsley and serve immediately. Visual cue: bright green parsley on top of glossy garlic-butter steak bites and potatoes.

Notes

For the best golden edges, keep the potatoes cut-side down for the first part of cooking before flipping or moving them. Store leftovers in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days; reheat in a hot skillet until warmed through (add a tiny splash of butter or oil). Freezing is not recommended because the potatoes can soften. Dietary swap: use plant-based butter instead of butter for a dairy-free version—toss while warm so it coats the steak bites and potatoes.

Leave a Comment

Recipe Rating