Super crispy beef tossed with a sweet and sticky sauce - better than take out!
When it comes to take-out, I am all about dishes like sweet and sour pork, Chinese Lemon Chicken and Hong Kong style Sweet and Sour Chicken which is tossed with sweet sauces. There's something seriously addictive about something sweet and sticky tossed with super crispy meat - sadly most of the time I end up with sweet and sticky soggy meat but that's about to change because now we can make this at home totally tweaked with crispiness galore - better than take out! 🙂
One of the most delicious ways to enjoy take-out is to have it as leftovers - sometimes even cold! This recipe will not maintain the crispiness the next day BUT it won't be soggy either! It actually has a bit of a nice chew! Make once, enjoy twice - my kinda meal.
If you're looking for something spicier then you definitely need to check out my hakka takeout favorites, chilli chicken and chicken Manchurian which have a bit more spices in the batter and are slightly spicier as well.
INGREDIENTS FOR CRISPY BEEF
Most ingredients can be found at a local grocery store, except for hoisin sauce and shaoxing cooking wine which can be easily found at an Asian grocery store or online.
For this recipe, I usually use a top sirloin steak but this can easily be substituted with flank steak or skirt steaks as well.
This recipe uses quite a bit of soy sauce in it so it is very easy to over-do the saltiness which is why I used light soy sauce (reduced-sodium soy sauce). If you don't have reduced-sodium soy sauce, cut back on the amount of soy sauce by a few tablespoons and replace it with water to dilute it a bit. As always do taste tests until you get it just the way you like it 🙂
SLICING AND MARINATING THE BEEF
For the marinade, I like to use a food processor to blitz everything together. It makes it more like paste which coats the beef quite nicely so each piece of beef has crazy flavour! However, I know not everyone has a food processor kicking around so you can do this by hand as well, just make sure to finely chop it or grate it. Eating chunks of ginger is not fun 🙂
How you cut the beef is totally your preference in this recipe! 🙂 However, I do like to cut them into 1 cm thin strips - gives me more surface area for more crispies! Woohoo!
If your steak is more than 1 cm thick, cut the strips in half length-wise again.
HOW TO MAKE THE BEEF EXTRA CRISPY
There are a few things I like to do to make sure the beef is as crispy as it can be:
- Use a Lot of Potato Starch - There is quite a bit of potato starch in the recipe - it's intentional! To get the beef extra crispy, you will need to coat the beef twice (after it has marinated). The first time you coat the beef with ½ cup of corn starch you will notice that the moisture in the beef will just sop up that starch. After 10 minutes, starch it again with the other ½ cup of corn starch and it should be nicely coated! Just keep in mind that the recipe is using 1.5 lbs of beef so cut back on the starch if you are using less beef.
Note: After you toss the beef with starch, you might notice that the beef will clump together - not a big deal, use your fingers to separate it before frying it up. - Make Sure the Oil is Hot - When you are ready to deep fry the beef, make sure the oil is hot before adding the beef in. To test if the oil is hot enough, add a small piece of beef in. It should sizzle instantly. If the oil is not hot enough the beef will end up soggy and absorb all the oil. 🙁 To maintain a consistent hot oil, cook the beef in batches so you don't have too many things in the pan at once dropping the temperature.
- Double Fry All the Thingz! - Double frying does wonders to making things extra crispy. Since the beef is cut very thinly, you only need to fry it for 1 minute the first time, and another 1 minute the second time! Quick!
LOOKING FOR MORE TAKEOUT RECIPES? TRY THESE!
- Sweet and Sticky Char Siu (Chinese BBQ Pork)
- Miso Corn Egg Drop Soup
- Singapore Noodles
- Crispy Sweet and Sour Pork
- Beef Chow Fun (Beef Ho Fun)
- Chilli Chicken
- Chicken Manchurian
DID YOU MAKE THIS CRISPY BEEF RECIPE?
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Recipe Card
Sweet and Sticky Crispy Beef
Joyce's Recipe Notes
- For deep frying, I like to use oils that have a mild flavor and a high smoking temperature like peanut, canola, vegetable, sunflower or corn oil.
- If you are using potato starch to deep fry the meat, make sure to not overcrowd the pan if you are using a shallow pan. Put the meat in one at a time fry them without touching each other. I find that potato starch likes to stick when you are initially frying it and if the pan is crowded (meat is all touching) you will end up with a giant ball of crispy meat instead of small crispy bite-sized meat.
- You can double up the sauce ingredients to make more sauce if you love things super saucy. This stuff is amazing drizzled on plain white rice! 🙂
- If you're pressed for time, shorten the marinating time to 30-40 minutes by leaving the beef at room temperature for 20-30 minutes - instead of in the fridge for an hour.
- The key to a crispier beef is to make sure the oil is hot oil before you start to deep fry and double frying it! 🙂
- No low sodium soy sauce? No problem! Cut back the amount of soy sauce by a few tablespoons and replace it with water to dilute it for a lighter and less salty soy sauce.
- This is amazing with a bit of heat as well! Add a few chopped-up peppers while you are cooking the sauce or add a few teaspoons of cayenne pepper for a bit of a kick!
Ingredients
- 1.5 lbs top sirloin steak (any type of beef works - flank steak, skirt steak)
- 1 cup potato starch (divided in half, can be substituted with corn starch, but it won't be as crispy) *see notes
- oil (for deep frying) (see notes, for type of oil)
Beef Marinade
- 1 small onion
- 2 cloves garlic
- 4-5 slices ginger (sliced thin, 2-3 mm)
- 1 tablespoon light soy sauce (reduced sodium)
Sweet and Sticky Sauce
- ¾ cup honey
- ¼ cup + 2 tablespoons light soy sauce (reduced sodium)
- ½ cup water
- 1 tablespoon hoisin sauce
- ½ tablespoon rice vinegar
- 1 tablespoon sesame oil
- 1 tablespoon shaoxing cooking wine
Corn Starch Slurry (To thicken sauce)
- 5 teaspoons corn starch
- 6 teaspoons water
Garnish & Toppings (Optional)
- 1-2 stalks green onion chopped
- toasted sesame seeds
Instructions
Marinate the Beef
- Slice the steak into 1 cm wide strips and place it in a bowl. (If your steak is more than 1 cm thick, cut the strips in half again length-wise)
- In a food processor, blitz the onion, garlic, and ginger until it is a paste. (If you do not have a food processor, you can grate them or chop it very finely by hand, just make sure the ginger bits are very tiny)
- Add the marinade and 1 tablespoon of soy sauce to the beef and mix well and marinate it in the fridge for 1 hour (or 20-30 minutes at room temperature)
Deep Frying the Beef
- After the beef has marinated, dust ½ cup of potato starch (or corn starch) on the beef and use your fingers to loosely coat the beef with it. Let it sit for 10 minutes
- While you are waiting for the meat to marinate, heat up a heavy bottom pot (or wok) and set the stove to medium heat. Add at least 1 inch of oil to the pot and wait for it to get hot. (It should reach a temperature of 375F). I like to poke a wooden chopstick, or the handle of a wooden spoon into the oil and wait for it to bubble. Once it bubbles, the oil is hot enough.
- Once the beef has marinated for 10 minutes, dust the other ½ cup of potato starch (or corn starch) on the beef again to lightly re-coat the beef and lightly dust off any excess starch. Deep fry it immediately.
- Using your fingers separate the beef if they are clumped together and deep fry it in the oil in small batches (make sure the oil is hot but not smoking - to test if the oil is hot enough, add 1 small piece of beef first and see if it instantly sizzles)
- Deep fry the beef for 1-2 minutes, and remove it from the pot onto a plate with parchment paper or newspaper.
- Once all the beef has been cooked once (first fry), add all of it back in for the second deep fry for 1 more minute.
Sweet & Sticky Sauce Time!
- Remove all the oil from the pot and set it back on the stove on medium low heat
- Add in all the sauce ingredients, except the corn starch slurry ingredients.
- Stir until everything is combined well and wait until it comes to a low rolling boil
- In a small bowl, combine the corn starch and cold water to make a corn starch slurry and add it into the sauce and keep stirring until the sauce has thickened. Turn off the heat.
- Add in the crispy beef and coat it with the sauce
- Serve immediately! Goes amazing with plain rice. 🙂
Nutrition
*Nutritional information is calculated using online tools and is an estimate*
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Maryke says
Can you use Indonesian sweet, dark soya sauce for this or would it be too intense?
Joyce says
Hi Maryke,
For this recipe, Indonesian sweet dark soy sauce would be too sweet to substitute it with regular soy sauce, assuming you mean Kecap Manis? You can try experimenting and mixing regular soy sauce with the Indonesian sweet dark soy (kecap manis) but omit the honey so that it is not super sweet. Also keep in mind that Indonesian sweet dark soy is very dark in color so your final dish might look very dark.
Hope this helps! 🙂
Joyce
Amanda says
I’ve made this a few times now and your recipe is fab, my husband and little boy have both decided this is their fav dish. I’ve also tried it with pork and it worked really well. Thinking about trying it with chicken next. Thanks for sharing ?
Joyce says
Hi Amanda!
I am so happy to hear from you about this! You really made my day! 🙂
You just gave me an crazy idea as well with switching up the meats! I'm going to experiment and try to use pork belly as well! (fried so its crispy)! 😀 You rock! 🙂
Jeff says
You made my day!!!
I am a huge fan of western Chinese food and in Calgary Alberta Canada we have a dish that originated in a north east restaurant. It is very much your sweet and sticky beef. We call it "crispy ginger beef" sold as a main dish at most Chinese restaurants here.
I took your recipe and followed it exactly but made a couple additions to make it look closer to our favorite dish. I added 1tsp crushed chilies, 1/2tsp ground ginger, and a clove of garlic to the sauce.
I also added some shredded carrot and julienned red pepper after the sauce thickened to soften the veggies a bit before tossing the crispy beef in.
It came out better than the restaurant version except without the MSG and all the sugar they use. Thank you I would never have thought of honey instead of white or golden sugar
Allergy Side note thought.... hoisin sauce contains a small amount of peanuts.
Joyce says
Yay you made my day as well! I am so happy that I can share something you can enjoy at home (and make even tastier!) I am so happy you tweaked this to your liking as well! I think your additions are fantastic additions that I myself will be using as well! 🙂 I definitely agree that having control of the sugar is such a wonderful thing especially since you can tweak it to the way you like 🙂 I had no idea about the peanut allergy in hoisin sauce! :O Hope this didn't affect you?
Trynity says
I made this last night. It was delicious. I added a tbs of crushed red pepper to the sauce for some spice and used thin sliced rib eye. I served it with garlic bok choy and steamed brown rice. Everyone loved it! Thank you for the recipe!!
Joyce says
The crushed red peppers is such a fantastic idea for a bit of spice! Wow your meal sounds delicious, I'm craving garlic bok choy now! heehee. I'm super happy you enjoyed this 🙂 Yay!
Sandy says
Thank you so much for the advice..Will try again next time and hopefully i will get the same result as yours 😀
Joyce says
I'm happy to help and very glad you got in touch! 🙂 Oh I forgot to mention! While you are deep frying, try not to overcrowd the pan as well. It will drop the temperature of the oil and make the meat less crispy as well. It's a bit more time consuming to do it in smaller batches but it'll be crispier in the end! 🙂
Sandy says
Hi just tried making this last night.It was really good even though i had not achieved the crispiness your talking about...could it be that my oil was not hot enough?Also,have you experience wherein after putting the beef in the heated oil,bubbles would start to rise from the pan?
Joyce says
Hi Sandy!
You might be right. If the oil is not hot enough, you usually will get a soggier result. I usually like using a wooden chopstick (or the end of a wooden spoon) and stick it in the oil to test if the oil is hot enough. If it starts to bubble vigorously, then you're good to go.
Usually, double frying it also will fix up anything that is not fully crispy.
I have experienced bubbles from deep frying! This is completely normal. This usually happens when there is moisture in the food you are trying to deep fry.
In the past, I also noticed whenever I deep fry something that has a loose layer of flour on it, the flour ends up falling off the meat and causes the oil to bubble. (It's actually the oil deep frying the flour that got away) and to prevent that, I sometimes let my meat sit longer (maybe an addtional 10-15 minutes) with the flour/batter so that it has a chance to glue onto the meat better and then deep fry it. I also try to lightly shake out the meat and dust off any excess flour as well so that it doesn't go into the oil and gunk it up too much.
Hope this helps? 🙂 If you have any questions please don't hesitate to ask Sandy! 🙂
Christie says
Made this tonight! Kids loved it so did my parents. Mum said it was better then any Chinese from restaurants she’s had in years. Only thing is bit messy in kitchen after.
Joyce says
Woohoo! 😀 The sauce is quite addictive, I find I like to double up the sauce sometimes just to put on rice heehee! I am so happy to hear this turned out for you and they loved it! I definitely agree with you - the mess in the kitchen is quite a pain haha 🙂 I have a bit of an addiction to deep frying and I feel like I spend half my life just cleaning up mess haha 🙂