Hawaiian Beef Broccoli

Servings: 2 Total Time: 35 mins Difficulty: Easy
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This is the kind of beef broccoli I make when I want takeout comfort but only have a small piece of flank steak. The sauce is simple: shoyu, oyster sauce, brown sugar, garlic, ginger, and cornstarch. It turns glossy in the pan and clings to the broccoli instead of pooling underneath it.

I serve it with rice every time. The recipe makes two bowls, and the rice matters because the sauce is salty-sweet and strong enough to season the whole plate.

The source ingredient list had one cornstarch amount that was clearly garbled, while the method called for 2 tablespoons. I follow the method here because that amount makes sense for coating the beef and thickening the sauce.

Why I keep coming back to this

  • It cooks in about 15 minutes once the ingredients are cut and the sauce is mixed.
  • Pounding the flank steak thin means it browns quickly instead of steaming.
  • Shoyu gives a familiar local-style saltiness that works beautifully with oyster sauce.
  • The broccoli stays bright if I add it after the beef has started browning.
  • The sauce is thick but not heavy, so it coats the stir-fry without turning gluey.
  • It is easy to stretch with extra vegetables when I need more than two servings.

What you need (and what each one is doing)

  • 1/2 tablespoon premium oyster sauce.Oyster sauce gives the stir-fry body and a savory background that makes the small amount of beef taste bigger.
  • 1 tablespoon brown sugar.Brown sugar balances the shoyu and helps the sauce glaze the meat.
  • kosher salt and pepper (to taste).I season the beef lightly before it hits the pan, then adjust at the end.
  • 1/2 pound flank steak, pounded thin.Thin flank steak cooks quickly and stays tender if sliced across the grain.
  • 1/2 medium head broccoli florets (or 1 medium head, chopped).Broccoli soaks up the sauce at the edges. I cut the stems thin so they cook with the florets.
  • 1/2 teaspoon ginger powder.Powdered ginger is convenient and blends smoothly into the sauce.
  • 2 tablespoons cornstarch (source ingredient amount was malformed; source method uses 2 Tablespoons).Cornstarch both coats the beef and thickens the sauce into a glossy finish.
  • 1/4 cup shoyu.Shoyu is the main salty flavor. I use it instead of generic soy sauce when I have it.
  • 1/4 large green onion, thinly sliced.A little green onion freshens the pan at the end.
  • 1 teaspoon minced garlic.Garlic makes the sauce smell like dinner almost immediately.

How I make it

Step 1 — Slice and season the beef

Slice the flank steak thinly across the grain, then season with a little kosher salt and pepper. Stir part of the cornstarch with a few spoonfuls of water and coat the beef lightly. I do this right before cooking so the coating stays silky, not pasty.

Step 2 — Mix the sauce

In a bowl, stir together the shoyu, brown sugar, oyster sauce, garlic, ginger powder, and remaining cornstarch. I like mixing the sauce before the pan is hot because stir-fries move too quickly for hunting through cabinets.

Step 3 — Sear the steak

Heat a large skillet over medium-high heat and add a thin film of oil. When the oil shimmers, add the steak in a single layer. Let it sit briefly before stirring so it gets some browned edges.

Step 4 — Add broccoli and green onion

Add the chopped broccoli and green onion to the skillet. Stir-fry about 5 minutes, until the broccoli is tender-crisp. If the pan seems dry, I splash in a tablespoon of water and cover it for one minute to help the stems soften.

Step 5 — Glaze and serve

Pour in the sauce and stir constantly as it thickens. This only takes a couple of minutes. When the beef and broccoli are shiny and hot, I spoon everything over freshly cooked rice.

Tips from my kitchen

  • Cut across the grain.Flank steak can be chewy if sliced the wrong way.
  • Do not crowd the pan.If the skillet is small, brown the beef in two quick batches.
  • Keep broccoli bite-size.Big florets stay raw in the center before the sauce thickens.
  • Taste at the end.Shoyu brands vary, so I adjust with water, pepper, or a pinch of sugar.

Variations I have actually tried

  • Fresh ginger:I use 1 teaspoon grated fresh ginger instead of powder when I have it.
  • Chicken version:Thin chicken thighs cook well with the same sauce.
  • Vegetable-heavy:Mushrooms, carrots, or bell pepper can join the broccoli.
  • Tofu bowl:Crisp tofu cubes make a good meatless version with the same sauce.
  • Spicy finish:A spoonful of chili crisp at the table is very good here.

Small details I pay attention to

I treat hawaiian beef broccoli as a recipe where the written numbers are a guide, not a reason to stop paying attention. I look for the practical cues: the way the dough feels, how the sauce coats a spoon, how the edges brown, or whether the center has actually set. Those little signs are what keep a familiar recipe from turning into a dry loaf, a pale crust, or a pan of fruit that never thickened.

I also set up my counter before I start. Ingredients measured, pan or skillet ready, towel nearby, and a clear place for cooling. That sounds fussy, but it keeps me from making rushed choices while butter is softening, dough is drying, or a hot pan is waiting. Most of my kitchen mistakes happen in the two minutes when I think I can multitask.

How I like to serve it

For the first serving of hawaiian beef broccoli, I keep things simple so I can taste what the recipe is doing. If it is baked, I let it cool long enough for the crumb, crust, or filling to settle. If it is cooked on the stove, I serve it while the texture is still lively. That first plate tells me whether I want extra salt, something creamy, something crisp, or just a cup of coffee beside it.

When I make it for other people, I add the extras at the table instead of hiding them in the recipe. A bowl of fruit, hot sauce, whipped cream, rice, butter, or chopped herbs lets everyone steer their own plate. I like recipes that can be shared without making the cook stand there explaining every bite.

Storing and serving

Leftovers keep in the refrigerator for up to three days. I store the rice separately if possible so it does not absorb all the sauce overnight.

To reheat, I use a skillet with a splash of water over medium heat. The microwave works too, but I stop and stir halfway so the beef does not overcook in hot spots.

Frequently asked questions

Can I bake this instead?

You can spread the beef and broccoli on a sheet pan and bake at 375°F (190°C) for about 25 minutes, but I prefer the skillet because the sauce thickens better.

What is shoyu?

Shoyu is Japanese-style soy sauce. In Hawaii cooking, it is a common pantry staple and gives this dish its main salty flavor.

Can I use frozen broccoli?

Yes, but I thaw it and pat it dry first. Frozen broccoli releases water, so the sauce may need an extra minute to thicken.

Why is my beef tough?

It may have been sliced with the grain or cooked too long. Thin slices and fast heat are the fix.

Is this very sweet?

It has a little sweetness from 1 tablespoon brown sugar, but the shoyu and oyster sauce keep it savory.

If this lands on your dinner table, tell me whether you kept it classic or added extra vegetables.

Hawaiian Beef Broccoli

Prep Time 20 mins Cook Time 15 mins Total Time 35 mins Difficulty: Easy Servings: 2 Calories: 57 kcal Dietary:
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Description

This Hawaiian beef broccoli is a quick shoyu and oyster sauce stir-fry with tender flank steak and crisp broccoli. I serve it over hot rice so the sweet-salty sauce has somewhere to go.

Ingredients You’ll Need

Instructions

  1. Slice the flank steak thinly across the grain and season lightly with kosher salt and pepper. Mix part of the cornstarch with a few tablespoons water and coat the steak.
  2. In a bowl, stir together the shoyu, brown sugar, oyster sauce, garlic, ginger powder, and remaining cornstarch.
  3. Heat oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Sear the steak strips for a few minutes, stirring occasionally, until browned at the edges.
  4. Add the chopped broccoli and green onion. Cook about 5 minutes, until the broccoli is tender-crisp.
  5. Pour the sauce over the beef and broccoli and stir until glossy and thickened. Serve hot over freshly cooked rice.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 2


Amount Per Serving
Calories 57kcal
% Daily Value *
Sodium 3mg1%
Potassium 15mg1%
Total Carbohydrate 14g5%
Sugars 6g

Calcium 8 mg
Iron 0.1 mg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Note

Cornstarch fix. The source ingredient quantity was malformed, but the source method clearly uses 2 Tablespoons.

Rice helps. The sauce is concentrated and tastes best over plain hot rice.

Pan heat. Medium-high heat gives browned beef without a long cook time.

Broccoli stems. Slice stems thin so they cook at the same pace as florets.

Keywords: beef broccoli recipe hawaii, Hawaiian beef broccoli, shoyu beef, flank steak stir fry, broccoli stir fry, oyster sauce beef, quick dinner

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:
Can I bake this instead?

You can spread the beef and broccoli on a sheet pan and bake at 375°F (190°C) for about 25 minutes, but I prefer the skillet because the sauce thickens better.

What is shoyu?

Shoyu is Japanese-style soy sauce. In Hawaii cooking, it is a common pantry staple and gives this dish its main salty flavor.

Can I use frozen broccoli?

Yes, but I thaw it and pat it dry first. Frozen broccoli releases water, so the sauce may need an extra minute to thicken.

Why is my beef tough?

It may have been sliced with the grain or cooked too long. Thin slices and fast heat are the fix.

Is this very sweet?

It has a little sweetness from 1 tablespoon brown sugar, but the shoyu and oyster sauce keep it savory.

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