Blackstone Beef and Broccoli

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Tender beef strips, crisp broccoli, and a glossy brown sauce are exactly what this Blackstone beef and broccoli does best. The griddle gives you fast, high heat and a little char without steaming the vegetables into mush, and that means every bite keeps some texture. The sauce clings instead of pooling, which is what turns a simple stir-fry into something worth making again next week.

The trick is in the order. The beef gets a short cornstarch marinade, which helps it stay juicy and gives the sauce something to grab onto later. The broccoli goes onto the hot griddle before the garlic and ginger, so it can pick up a little color and still stay bright green and tender-crisp. Once the sauce goes in, everything moves fast, so the griddle stays hot and the beef never has time to overcook.

You’ll find the exact timing below, plus the one detail that keeps the sauce from turning thin and watery on the griddle. There’s also a simple storage note if you want to cook this ahead and reheat it for lunch the next day.

The beef stayed tender and the broccoli had that perfect crisp bite. I was worried the sauce would get runny on the Blackstone, but it thickened up beautifully and coated everything just like takeout.

★★★★★— Melissa R.

Save this Blackstone Beef and Broccoli for a fast griddle dinner with seared beef, crisp broccoli, and glossy sauce.

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The One Thing That Keeps Beef Tender on a Hot Griddle

Thin-sliced flank steak can go from tender to tough in a minute on a Blackstone, and that’s usually because it spends too long sitting in one layer of heat. The short marinade here does two jobs at once: the soy and brown sugar season the meat, and the cornstarch forms a light coating that protects the surface while helping the sauce thicken later.

Batch cooking matters more than most people think. If you pile all the beef onto the griddle at once, it steams in its own juices and loses that browned edge that gives this dish its best flavor. Two or three quick batches keep the surface hot enough to sear, and that sear is what keeps the sauce from tasting flat.

  • Flank steak — This cut stays tender when it’s sliced thin against the grain. If you swap in something tougher, the quick griddle time won’t be enough to soften it.
  • Cornstarch — It’s doing more than thickening. It helps the beef stay slick and tender while also giving the sauce that takeout-style cling.
  • Broccoli florets — Fresh broccoli gives the best bite here. Frozen broccoli releases too much water and fights the browning you want from a griddle dish.
  • Beef broth — This rounds out the sauce so the soy and oyster sauce don’t taste salty or sharp. Water works in a pinch, but the sauce won’t have the same depth.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in the Sauce

Blackstone Beef and Broccoli savory glossy

The soy sauce brings salt and color, but it also gives the sauce its backbone. Oyster sauce adds the darker, rounder savory note that makes the dish taste like it came from a good takeout kitchen instead of just being seasoned beef and broccoli. Brown sugar softens both of those edges and helps the sauce glaze instead of staying thin.

Garlic and ginger need the hottest part of the cook, but only for a few seconds. They bloom fast on a griddle, and if they sit too long they turn bitter and lose the bright punch that makes the sauce smell alive. The beef broth loosens everything just enough to coat the meat and broccoli without turning the pan into a puddle.

Getting the Heat, the Sear, and the Sauce in the Right Order

Marinating the Beef

Stir the soy sauce, brown sugar, and cornstarch together until the cornstarch disappears, then coat the sliced flank steak and let it sit for 30 minutes. The meat should look lightly slick, not wet and soupy. If there’s a thick slurry pooling at the bottom, the beef wasn’t sliced thin enough or wasn’t tossed well enough, and that uneven coating can leave patches that brown too fast.

Searing in Batches

Heat the Blackstone until it’s fully hot before the beef hits the surface, then add oil and lay the meat down in a single layer. You want a hard sizzle right away and browned edges within a couple of minutes. If the meat starts to gray before it browns, the griddle isn’t hot enough or the pan is crowded, and that’s when the beef turns chewy.

Cooking the Broccoli Without Softening It

Add a fresh little slick of oil and spread the broccoli out so it touches the hot surface instead of piling up. It should brighten in color and pick up a few blistered spots while staying firm enough to bite. If the florets start to scorch before they soften, the heat is too high for too long, so give them a quick toss and move on before they lose their crispness.

Building the Glossy Finish

Push the broccoli aside, add the garlic and ginger for about 30 seconds, then pour in the remaining soy sauce, oyster sauce, brown sugar, and beef broth. The sauce should bubble and thicken almost immediately from the cornstarch left on the beef. Return the beef, toss everything until the sauce clings in a shiny coat, and pull it off the heat once the broccoli is tender-crisp and the beef is just cooked through.

How to Adapt This for Different Diets and Bigger Batches

Gluten-Free Version

Use a gluten-free soy sauce or tamari and check that your oyster sauce is labeled gluten-free. The texture stays the same, and you won’t lose the glossy finish, but the salt level can shift a little, so taste the sauce before the final toss.

Lower-Sugar Swap

Cut the brown sugar back by half and let the oyster sauce do more of the work. The sauce will still glaze, but it will taste a little less like classic takeout and a little more savory-forward.

Chicken Instead of Beef

Thin-sliced chicken thighs work better than breasts because they stay juicy under high heat. Cook them just until they lose the pink color and the juices run clear, then finish the dish the same way. Chicken won’t bring quite the same rich flavor, but the sauce and broccoli still make a solid griddle dinner.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The broccoli softens a little, but the sauce stays flavorful.
  • Freezer: It freezes, but the broccoli loses its crisp texture. If you plan to freeze it, undercook the broccoli slightly so it holds up better after thawing.
  • Reheating: Reheat in a hot skillet or on the griddle over medium heat with a small splash of broth or water. The common mistake is blasting it in the microwave until the beef tightens up; gentle heat keeps the meat from turning dry.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I use sirloin instead of flank steak?+

Yes. Sirloin works well as long as you slice it thin and against the grain, because the quick cook time won’t soften a thick piece of meat. It’s a little leaner than flank steak, so don’t overcook it on the griddle.

How do I keep the sauce from getting watery on the Blackstone?+

Keep the griddle hot and cook the beef in batches so the meat sears instead of steaming. The cornstarch in the marinade and the quick finish with broth and sauces should thicken almost immediately. If it looks thin, let it bubble for another 30 to 60 seconds before tossing it together.

Can I make this ahead of time?+

You can slice the beef and marinate it up to 8 hours ahead. The broccoli is best cooked right before serving so it keeps its bite. If you want to prep further ahead, mix the sauce ingredients separately and hold them in the fridge.

How do I slice flank steak so it stays tender?+

Look for the long muscle fibers running through the steak and cut across them, not with them. Thin slices matter because they cook fast and stay tender under high heat. If the slices are too thick, the outside will overcook before the center gets any softness.

Can I use frozen broccoli for this recipe?+

Fresh broccoli works best because it sears instead of releasing extra water. Frozen broccoli can work in a pinch, but thaw it first and pat it dry so it doesn’t steam the rest of the dish. Expect a softer texture and less browning.

Blackstone Beef and Broccoli

Blackstone beef and broccoli stir fry with tender flank steak and vibrant green broccoli in a glossy brown sauce. Sear the beef in batches on a hot griddle, then toss everything together until the sauce clings and shines over rice.
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: 680

Ingredients
  

Marinade and sauce
  • 0.25 cup soy sauce Divided per recipe: used in marinade and later for the sauce.
  • 2 tbsp oyster sauce For the glossy brown sauce.
  • 2 tbsp brown sugar Used to balance savory flavors (in marinade and sauce).
  • 1 tbsp cornstarch Thickens the sauce when combined with soy and sugar.
  • 0.25 cup beef broth Helps loosen and finish the sauce on the griddle.
  • 6 cloves garlic Minced; cooked briefly to keep it fragrant.
  • 1 tbsp ginger Grated; mixed into the aromatics.
  • 3 tbsp oil For searing beef and cooking broccoli.
Main stir-fry
  • 1.5 lb flank steak Sliced thin against the grain.
  • 4 cup broccoli florets Cooked until tender-crisp.
  • 0.25 sesame seeds For garnish.

Equipment

  • 1 cast iron skillet

Method
 

Marinate the beef
  1. Combine 2 tablespoons soy sauce, 1 tablespoon brown sugar, and cornstarch, then marinate beef for 30 minutes.
  2. Let the marinated beef stand at room temperature while you prep the griddle-ready ingredients so it sears quickly.
Sear the beef on the Blackstone griddle
  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 to keep it tender.
Cook the broccoli and build the sauce
  1. Add the remaining oil and cook the broccoli for 4-5 minutes until tender-crisp with vibrant green color.
  2. Add garlic and ginger and cook for 30 seconds to release aroma without browning.
  3. Add the remaining soy sauce, oyster sauce, brown sugar, and beef broth, then bring the mixture together so it turns glossy.
  4. Return the beef to the griddle, toss everything in the sauce for 2 minutes, and cook until the sauce clings to the beef and broccoli.
  5. Garnish with sesame seeds immediately so they stay toasted and visible.

Notes

For the best sear, slice the flank steak thin against the grain and avoid crowding—cook in batches. Refrigerate leftovers in an airtight container up to 3 days; reheat on a hot griddle or skillet until warmed through (sauce may thicken, so splash in 1-2 tbsp water). Freezing is not recommended because broccoli can soften. Dietary swap: use gluten-free soy sauce if you want a gluten-free version.

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