Chinese-American Beef and Broccoli With Oyster Sauce Recipe (2024)

  • Beef Stir-Fry
  • Chinese-American
  • Flank Steaks
  • Hanger Steak
  • Skirt Steaks

The key to great flavor is extremely high heat.

By

J. Kenji López-Alt

Chinese-American Beef and Broccoli With Oyster Sauce Recipe (1)

J. Kenji López-Alt

Culinary Consultant

Kenji is the former culinary director for Serious Eats and a current culinary consultant for the site. He is also a New York Times food columnist and the author of The Food Lab: Better Home Cooking Through Science.

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Updated September 07, 2023

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Chinese-American Beef and Broccoli With Oyster Sauce Recipe (2)

Why It Works

  • Cooking over high heat ensures the meat and vegetables get a strong sear on the outside without overcooking in the middle.
  • A brief marinade seasons the beef ahead of cooking.

There's an old dirty joke about beef with broccoli that is neither particularly appropriate for this nor particularly funny, so I'll spare you from having to listen to it. The only reason I bring it up at all is to demonstrate that beef and broccoli is so ingrained in American culture that we can actually refer to it in a joke and everyone immediately knows what you're talking about.

The beef and broccoli of my youth, I must say, was pretty special. I grew up in New York and Boston, both of which have seriously good Chinatowns and many restaurants specializing in the Chinese-American, Cantonese-derived dishes popular in food courts across the country. Beef and broccoli is one of the most popular, and with good reason. Who could say no to tender strips of marinated beef seared to a smoky crispness in a hot wok, tossed with charred florets of crisp, bright green broccoli, all tossed in a savory-sweet, garlic, and ginger-scented oyster sauce? I sure as heck loved me the hell out of some beef and broccoli as a kid.

It wasn't until when I went off to college and had the first of many mess-hall, steam-tray style beef and broc-trocities that I realized what many people's impression of the dish must be: steamed, grey beef in a watery sauce that tastes mostly of thinned out soy sauce and flour, along with drab gray lumps of mushy broccoli that stand limp and wet like weeping willows after a storm. Yuck.

That's what happens when you try to cook without enough heat input. As with any wok-cooked stir-fry, the key to really great beef and broccoli is to use the highest possible heat, minimizing cook time so that you can get a great sear on the meat and vegetables before they begin to overcook in the center.

For this version, I used flap meat marinated in soy and rice wine (you can feel free to use flank, hanger, or skirt if you prefer), sliced thin, then rapidly stir-fried in a wok that I heated directly over the coals in my Weber kettle grill. The coals get the wok hot enough so that I could sear the beef, push it up the sides, sear the broccoli, add the aromatics, then toss everything in the sauce right there in one go without having to move things back and forth. It's the ideal quick meal, ready in under five minutes once you've got your coals nice and hot.

When I make a version indoors at home, I make sure to cook in small batches in a wok set over a gas burner, letting the pan preheat as much as possible between batches of meat and veg before finally stirring it all back together with the sauce in the wok at the end.

Chinese-American Beef and Broccoli With Oyster Sauce Recipe (3)

June 2012

Recipe Details

Chinese-American Beef and Broccoli With Oyster Sauce

Prep5 mins

Cook15 mins

Active10 mins

Marinating Time20 mins

Total40 mins

Serves4 servings

Ingredients

  • 1 pound flank steak, skirt steak, hanger steak, or flap meat, cut into 1/4-inch thick strips

  • 1/4 cup soy sauce(divided)

  • 1/4 cup Shaoxing wine or dry sherry (divided)

  • 2 teaspoons corn starch

  • 1/3 cup low-sodium homemade or store-bought chicken stock

  • 1/4 cup oyster sauce

  • 1 tablespoon sugar

  • 1 teaspoon sesame seed oil

  • 2 medium cloves garlic, finely minced (about 2 teaspoons)

  • 2 teaspoons finely minced fresh ginger

  • 3 scallions, whites finely sliced, greens cut into 1/2-inch segments, reserved separately

  • 4 tablespoons vegetable, peanut, or canola oil

  • 1 pound broccoli florets(about 1 1/2 quarts)

Directions

  1. In a bowl, combine beef, 1 tablespoon soy sauce, and 1 tablespoon Shaoxing wine and toss to coat. Place in refrigerator and let marinate for at least 20 minutes and up to 3 hours.

    Chinese-American Beef and Broccoli With Oyster Sauce Recipe (4)

  2. Meanwhile, combine remaining soy sauce with cornstarch and stir with a fork to form a slurry. Add remaining Shaoxing wine, chicken stock, oyster sauce, sugar, and sesame oil. Set aside. Combine garlic, ginger, and scallion whites in a bowl and set aside.

    Chinese-American Beef and Broccoli With Oyster Sauce Recipe (5)

  3. To Grill With a Wok Insert: Light one chimney full of charcoal. When all the charcoal is lit and covered with gray ash, pour out and arrange the coals in a pile on center of cooking grate. Place Weber 8835 Gourmet BBQ System Hinged Cooking Grate on grill and set wok in center. Add oil and heat until smoking. Add beef and cook, stirring and tossing until beef is lightly charred but still pink in spots, about 1 minute. Push beef to sides of wok to clear space in center. Add broccoli and cook, stirring in center until lightly charred, about 30 seconds. Toss with beef and push up sides of wok. Add garlic/ginger/scallion mixture to center of wok and immediately push all ingredients into center, tossing and stirring until beef is cooked through and broccoli is just barely tender but still crunchy, about 30 seconds longer. Stir sauce and pour into wok (it should immediately start to boil). Add scallion greens. Toss all ingredients to coat in sauce and cook until lightly thickened, about 30 seconds. Carefully transfer to a serving platter and serve.

  4. To Cook On A Burner: When ready to cook, heat 1 tablespoon oil in a wok over high heat until smoking. Add half of beef and cook without moving until well seared, about 1 minute. Continue cooking while stirring and tossing until lightly cooked but still pink in spots, about 1 minute. Transfer to a large bowl. Repeat with 1 more tablespoon of oil and remaining beef, adding beef to same bowl. Wipe out wok.

    Chinese-American Beef and Broccoli With Oyster Sauce Recipe (6)

  5. Add 1 more tablespoon oil to wok and heat over high heat until smoking. Add half of broccoli and cook until crisp-tender and lightly charred, about 1 minute. Transfer to bowl with beef. Repeat with remaining oil and remaining broccoli. Return wok to high heat until smoking. Return beef and broccoli to wok and add garlic/ginger/scallion mixture. Cook, tossing and stirring until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Add sauce and scallion greens and cook, tossing and stirring constantly until lightly thickened, about 45 seconds longer. Carefully transfer to a serving platter and serve.

    Chinese-American Beef and Broccoli With Oyster Sauce Recipe (7)

Notes

This recipe is the third in a four-part series about how to stir-fry on an outdoor grill.

Nutrition Facts (per serving)
449Calories
25g Fat
18g Carbs
36g Protein

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Nutrition Facts
Servings: 4
Amount per serving
Calories449
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 25g32%
Saturated Fat 5g26%
Cholesterol 90mg30%
Sodium 1527mg66%
Total Carbohydrate 18g6%
Dietary Fiber 4g16%
Total Sugars 5g
Protein 36g
Vitamin C 78mg389%
Calcium 97mg7%
Iron 3mg19%
Potassium 875mg19%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.

(Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.)

Chinese-American Beef and Broccoli With Oyster Sauce Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is Chinese beef and broccoli sauce made of? ›

The sauce is a combination of beef stock, light and dark soy sauce, Chinese rice wine (you can swap for sherry if you haven't got rice wine), sesame oil, sugar, white pepper and black pepper.

Why is oyster sauce used in stir fry? ›

Gently salty and briny, with a velvety smooth, thick texture, oyster sauce is in a number of Asian dishes. The condiment brings rich, savory flavor to whatever you pour it over or into – from Chinese broccoli to stir-fry marinades – and it's a mainstay in many Asian and Asian American kitchens.

What is the brown sauce in Chinese restaurants made of? ›

Basically, the most common American-Chinese Cantonese sauce (like for beef and broccoli) is almost always Oyster Sauce, Soy sauce, Corn Starch, sugar, garlic powder, onion powder, Chicken/Pork/Beef stock and optionally sesame oil. Many people add additional MSG powder to the sauce.

What's the difference between Chinese broccoli and American broccoli? ›

Chinese broccoli has broad blue-green leaves with long, crisp, thick stems and a small head. The long stems and dull green leaves are the main parts eaten, as opposed to the un-bloomed flower of Western broccoli. The full leaves are quite bitter with a sometimes spicy flavor.

How do Chinese make their meat so tender? ›

While there are several ways to velvet, a pound of meat needs about two teaspoons of cornstarch and two teaspoons of oil, says Leung. You may also include two to three tablespoons of water. For beef, add a 1/4-teaspoon of baking soda for tenderizing. Additional seasonings are optional and vary from recipe to recipe.

What is the most used sauce in Chinese food? ›

Soy sauce (jiàng yóu, 酱油), the most common of Chinese sauces, sounds simple, and for the most part, it is.

Do Chinese restaurants use oyster sauce? ›

Oyster sauce adds a savory flavor to many meat and vegetable dishes. The sauce is a staple for much Chinese family-style cooking. It is commonly used in noodle stir-fries, such as chow mein. It is also found in popular Chinese-American dishes such as beef with stir-fried vegetables.

How much oyster sauce to use? ›

Oyster sauce is a good finishing sauce for any kind of Asian-style fried noodle dish. Try tossing things like rice noodles or chow mein noodles in 1-2 spoonfuls of oyster sauce alone or combined with other ingredients. You could do the same with fried rice instead of fried noodles.

Is hoisin the same as oyster sauce? ›

One of the main differences between hoisin sauce and oyster sauce is that the latter contains oyster. Hoisin sauce is plant-based, so it can be an oyster sauce substitute for vegetarians if necessary.

What is the secret ingredient to tenderize meat? ›

Less than a teaspoon of baking soda ensures that your steak remains juicy and tender—even after a speedy marinade. While other recipes demand hours of marinating, this baking soda hack makes a flank steak or any other fibrous cut of beef ready to sear after just an hour.

What cut of beef is best for beef and broccoli? ›

Beef flank - Flank steaks are great for quick stir fry dishes, like beef and broccoli. It's cheap and flavorful. You can easy tenderize it as long you cut it into thin slices. Water - For hydrating the beef, making sure the meat stays as juicy as possible.

How much oyster sauce to add? ›

Oyster sauce is a good finishing sauce for any kind of Asian-style fried noodle dish. Try tossing things like rice noodles or chow mein noodles in 1-2 spoonfuls of oyster sauce alone or combined with other ingredients. You could do the same with fried rice instead of fried noodles.

How much stir fry sauce should I use? ›

For a basic stir fry, you'll want about 3 tablespoons of sauce. Most of the liquid will cook off, leaving you with just the flavors. If you'll be serving the stir fry over rice or other grains, you'll want about 1/3 cup of sauce and may want to thicken it up with a bit of cornstarch or flour.

How much oyster is in oyster sauce? ›

Oysters are shellfish, and oyster sauce does indeed contain oyster extract, traditionally made by simmering oysters in salt water and pressing out the juice. The premium bottle I have is 40% extract, while the supermarket shelf bottles are around 3%, iirc.

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