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Blackstone Beef and Broccoli
Home Dinner Recipes Blackstone Beef and Broccoli
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Blackstone Beef and Broccoli

Blackstone Beef and Broccoli

Tender beef strips, crisp-tender broccoli, and a glossy brown sauce are what make Blackstone beef and broccoli worth repeating. The griddle gives you the kind of fast, hard sear that keeps the beef juicy while the broccoli picks up just enough char at the edges to taste cooked, not soggy. The sauce clings instead of pooling, which is exactly what you want when it’s spooned over a bowl of rice.

The small things matter here. Slicing the flank steak thinly against the grain keeps it tender, and the short marinade does double duty by seasoning the meat and helping the sauce thicken later. On a hot Blackstone, you can cook the beef in batches so it browns instead of steaming, then build the sauce right on the griddle where the garlic and ginger pick up that extra savory depth.

Below, I’ve included the part most people get wrong with griddle stir-fries, plus a few smart swaps and storage notes so you can make this work any night of the week.

The beef stayed tender and the sauce thickened right on the griddle without turning gluey. I cooked it over rice and my husband asked if there was enough for lunch tomorrow.

★★★★★— Melissa R.

Save this Blackstone beef and broccoli for the nights when you want seared beef, crisp broccoli, and a sticky-sweet sauce fast.

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The Mistake That Makes Beef and Broccoli Go Soft on the Griddle

The biggest reason beef and broccoli turns limp on a Blackstone is crowding. If the meat goes down in one big pile, it releases moisture and steams before it sears. You want hot metal and enough space for the beef to brown in contact with the surface, not sit on top of itself waiting for heat to catch up.

The second issue is timing. Broccoli needs a head start on the griddle, but only enough to lose its raw bite. Push it too far and it turns drab and watery once the sauce goes on. The goal is bright green florets with a little char, then a quick finish in the sauce so everything stays crisp at the edges and glossy in the center.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dish

Blackstone Beef and Broccoli tender beef, glossy sauce, crisp broccoli
  • Flank steak — This cut stays flavorful and tender when sliced thin against the grain. If you swap in skirt steak, the method still works, but don’t skip the thin slicing or it’ll eat chewy.
  • Soy sauce — It seasons the beef from the inside and forms the salty base of the sauce. Low-sodium soy sauce works fine here if you want a little more control.
  • Oyster sauce — This is what gives the sauce that deep, takeout-style savoriness. There isn’t a perfect replacement, but hoisin sauce can stand in if that’s what you have; the flavor shifts sweeter and less briny.
  • Cornstarch — It helps the marinade coat the beef and thickens the sauce on the griddle. Don’t replace it with flour; flour muddies the sauce and won’t give you the same sheen.
  • Broccoli florets — Fresh florets hold their shape and give you the best texture. If the stems are thick, slice them thin so they cook at the same pace as the tops.
  • Garlic and ginger — These need just a short sizzle to wake up before the sauce goes in. If they scorch, the whole dish tastes bitter, so keep them moving and don’t let the griddle run dry.

Building the Sauce Before the Beef Overcooks

Marinate for a Short Window

Mix the beef with part of the soy sauce, brown sugar, and cornstarch, then let it sit for 30 minutes. That’s enough time for the seasoning to cling without turning the surface tacky or overly salty. If you marinate much longer with this much cornstarch, the coating gets pasty instead of silky.

Sear in Batches on a Hot Surface

Heat the Blackstone until a drop of water sizzles instantly, then add the oil and lay the beef down with space between pieces. Leave it alone long enough to build color before flipping. If it sticks at first, it usually needs another 20 to 30 seconds; once the crust forms, it releases more cleanly.

Cook the Broccoli Until It’s Bright, Not Soft

Add a little more oil and spread the broccoli out so the florets touch the griddle, not just each other. You want bright green edges and a few browned spots before the stems lose their crunch. If the broccoli is browning too fast before it softens, add a tablespoon of water and cover it briefly with a dome if you have one.

Finish with Sauce and Return the Beef

Garlic and ginger go in for only about 30 seconds, just until fragrant. Then add the remaining soy sauce, oyster sauce, brown sugar, and beef broth, scraping up anything stuck to the griddle. When the beef goes back in, toss until the sauce coats every strip and thickens slightly, which usually takes about 2 minutes.

How to Adapt This for a Smaller Griddle, a Different Cut, or No Gluten

Use skirt steak instead of flank steak

Skirt steak gives you a similar beefy flavor and sears beautifully, but it can tighten up faster than flank. Slice it thinly across the grain and keep the cook time short so it stays tender.

Make it gluten-free

Use tamari instead of soy sauce and choose a gluten-free oyster sauce. The texture stays the same, but the sauce may taste a touch rounder and less sharp than a standard soy-based version.

Add more vegetables without watering it down

Snap peas, sliced bell peppers, or mushrooms can go in after the broccoli. Keep the additions in a single layer and cook them fast so they stay crisp and don’t dump too much liquid into the sauce.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The broccoli softens a bit, but the flavor holds up well.
  • Freezer: It freezes, but the broccoli loses its best texture. Freeze only if you don’t mind softer vegetables; thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating.
  • Reheating: Warm it in a skillet over medium-low heat with a splash of water or broth. Microwaving works in a pinch, but it tends to push the beef past tender and makes the broccoli limp.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use frozen broccoli for Blackstone beef and broccoli?+

You can, but thaw it first and pat it dry. Frozen broccoli carries a lot of surface water, and if that moisture hits the griddle, it cools the pan and prevents the edges from browning.

How do I keep the beef tender instead of chewy?+

Slice it thinly against the grain and don’t overcook it. Flank steak gets chewy when it hangs on the heat too long, so pull it as soon as the outside is browned and finish it briefly in the sauce.

How do I thicken the sauce if it looks thin?+

Let it cook a little longer with the beef in the pan. Cornstarch needs a brief simmer to activate fully, and the sauce usually tightens as it coats the meat and vegetables. If it’s still loose, a tiny cornstarch slurry can fix it.

Can I make Blackstone beef and broccoli ahead of time?+

Yes. Slice and marinate the beef up to a day ahead, and cut the broccoli a few hours early if you want to save time. Cooked leftovers are best within a few days, but the full dish tastes freshest right off the griddle.

Can I cook this on a regular skillet instead of a Blackstone?+

Yes, use a large cast iron or stainless skillet over high heat and cook in batches. The main thing is keeping enough surface heat for browning; if the pan gets crowded, the beef and broccoli will steam instead of sear.

Blackstone Beef and Broccoli

Blackstone beef and broccoli stir fry with tender flank steak strips and vibrant green broccoli in a glossy brown sauce. Sear in batches on the griddle, then toss back together with an easy soy–oyster sauce until everything clings together.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
marinating 30 minutes
Total Time 1 hour
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Asian-American
Calories: 610

Ingredients
  

Beef and marinade
  • 1.5 lb flank steak Sliced thin against the grain.
  • 0.25 cup soy sauce
  • 2 tbsp oyster sauce
  • 2 tbsp brown sugar
  • 1 tbsp cornstarch
  • 3 tbsp oil
  • 6 garlic minced
  • 1 tbsp ginger grated
  • 0.25 cup beef broth
  • 0.25 tsp sesame seeds for garnish

Equipment

  • 1 Blackstone griddle

Method
 

Marinate the beef
  1. Combine 2 tablespoons soy sauce, 1 tablespoon brown sugar, and cornstarch, then marinate the beef for 30 minutes.
Sear beef and cook broccoli
  1. Heat the Blackstone griddle to high heat and add 2 tablespoons oil.
  2. Cook the beef in batches for 2-3 minutes per side until seared, then set aside.
  3. Add the remaining oil and cook the broccoli for 4-5 minutes until tender-crisp.
Build the glossy sauce
  1. Add the garlic and ginger, cooking for 30 seconds, until fragrant.
  2. Add the remaining soy sauce, oyster sauce, brown sugar, and beef broth.
  3. Return the beef to the griddle and toss everything in the sauce for 2 minutes, until it glistens and coats the meat and broccoli.
  4. Garnish with sesame seeds and serve immediately.

Notes

For the most tender bites, slice the flank steak thinly against the grain and keep the griddle hot before searing so the meat browns quickly. Refrigerate leftovers in a sealed container up to 3 days; reheat in a hot skillet or griddle until warmed through. Freezing is not recommended because broccoli texture can soften. If you want a lighter option, swap the oyster sauce for a low-sodium oyster sauce and use reduced-sodium soy sauce.

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