Blackstone Cowboy Stir Fry

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Steak strips, peppers, onions, and corn hit a hot Blackstone griddle and turn into the kind of dinner that disappears fast. The beef stays browned at the edges, the vegetables keep a little bite, and the sauce clings in a glossy layer that tastes smoky, savory, and just a little sweet. It’s the sort of meal that feels bigger than the effort it takes.

The trick here is keeping the griddle hot enough to sear the steak instead of steaming it. Thin-sliced sirloin cooks quickly, so it only needs a short pass on the heat before it gets pulled off and brought back at the end. That keeps the meat tender and lets the vegetables soften without turning limp.

Below, I’ll walk through the griddle timing that keeps everything in the right texture window, plus a few swaps if you want to adjust the sweetness, the cut of beef, or the way you serve it.

The steak stayed tender, the peppers kept a little crunch, and the sauce coated everything instead of pooling on the griddle. My husband kept sneaking bites straight off the spatula.

★★★★★— Jenna M.

Like this Blackstone Cowboy Stir Fry? Save it to Pinterest for a fast griddle dinner with seared steak, sweet corn, and smoky sauce.

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The One Griddle Mistake That Makes the Steak Tough

With a stir fry like this, the biggest problem isn’t the sauce. It’s crowding the steak. If the meat sits in a pile on the griddle, it steams, the edges go gray, and you lose the browned bits that give the whole dish its backbone. Thin sirloin needs room and heat, not patience.

Pull the steak as soon as it’s seared. It finishes later when it goes back in with the vegetables and sauce, so you’re not trying to cook it all the way through on the first pass. That short, hard sear is what keeps it juicy instead of chewy.

  • High heat — The griddle has to be fully hot before the oil goes down. If it’s just warm, the vegetables will soften before they color and the steak won’t brown cleanly.
  • Thin-sliced sirloin — This cut stays tender with quick cooking. Ribeye works too if you want more richness, but tougher cuts need longer cooking than this recipe gives them.
  • Corn — Fresh, frozen, or thawed frozen corn all work. Frozen is fine here because the griddle heat evaporates the moisture fast enough to keep it from tasting wet.
  • BBQ sauce and Worcestershire — This is the part that makes the dish taste bold instead of just salty. Together they bring smoke, depth, and a little tang that balances the sweet corn and brown sugar.

What Each Ingredient Is Doing in the Sauce

Blackstone Cowboy Stir Fry steak peppers corn
  • Sirloin steak — Sirloin gives you good beef flavor without needing a long cook. Slice it thin against the grain so it stays tender after the second toss on the griddle.
  • Bell peppers and onion — These bring sweetness and body. Slice them evenly so they soften at the same pace, but don’t cut them too thin or they’ll disappear into the sauce.
  • Garlic — Add it late. Garlic burns fast on a hot griddle, and burnt garlic will take over the whole pan. Two minutes with the corn is enough to wake it up.
  • Soy sauce, BBQ sauce, Worcestershire, and brown sugar — This combination builds a sauce that tastes layered without needing a long simmer. If you swap one out, the dish can flatten fast, so keep at least one salty base, one tangy element, and one sweet note.
  • Green onions — They’re not just garnish. That sharp finish cuts through the rich sauce and keeps the last bites from tasting heavy.

Building the Stir Fry in the Right Order

Getting a Clean Sear on the Steak

Heat the Blackstone until it’s ripping hot, then add the oil and spread it across the cooking surface. Season the steak with salt and pepper, lay it down in a single layer, and leave it alone long enough to get a crust. If you start flipping too early, the meat sticks and tears instead of browning. Three to four minutes is usually enough for thin strips, depending on how hot your griddle runs.

Softening the Vegetables Without Losing Their Bite

Once the steak comes off, add the peppers and onions to the same surface. They should sizzle right away and pick up a little color around the edges while still holding some structure. If they sit in a puddle of steam from overcrowding, turn the heat up and spread them out. The goal is softened, not mushy.

Finishing with Sauce and the Return of the Steak

Add the corn and garlic next, then pour in the sauce mixture so it hits the hot griddle and loosens any browned bits underneath. Return the steak and toss everything together for just a couple of minutes. That last toss is enough to glaze the meat and vegetables without overcooking the steak. Pull it the moment the sauce looks shiny and clingy.

How to Adapt This Blackstone Cowboy Stir Fry for Your Kitchen

Gluten-Free Version

Use a gluten-free soy sauce or tamari and check that your BBQ sauce is gluten-free too. The flavor stays bold and savory, but you keep the same sticky coating without changing the cooking method.

Dairy-Free and Naturally Rich Enough

This recipe is already dairy-free, which is part of why it works so well on the griddle. The sauce gets its body from the BBQ sauce, Worcestershire, and browned steak instead of butter or cream.

Swap the Steak for Chicken or Shrimp

Chicken thighs work better than chicken breast because they stay juicier under high heat, and shrimp need even less time than the steak. Keep the same sauce, but shorten the finish so the seafood doesn’t overcook and turn rubbery.

Make It Lower Sugar

Cut the brown sugar in half if you want a less sweet finish. You’ll still get balance from the BBQ sauce and soy sauce, but the glaze will taste a little sharper and less sticky.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The vegetables will soften a bit, but the flavor holds up well.
  • Freezer: It freezes okay, though the peppers and onions lose some texture after thawing. For best results, freeze the steak and sauce mixture separately from the vegetables if you know ahead of time that you’ll reheat it later.
  • Reheating: Reheat in a skillet over medium heat with a splash of water if the sauce has tightened up. The common mistake is blasting it over high heat, which dries the steak out fast and turns the vegetables limp.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I use a different cut of beef?+

Yes, but the cooking time changes with the cut. Flank steak or ribeye work well if you slice them thin against the grain; tougher cuts need longer cooking and won’t stay as tender in a quick stir fry like this.

How do I keep the steak from getting tough?+

Use high heat, cook it in a single layer, and pull it early. The steak finishes in the final toss with the sauce, so if you fully cook it on the first pass, it’ll overdo fast and turn chewy.

Can I make Blackstone Cowboy Stir Fry ahead of time?+

You can slice the vegetables and mix the sauce ahead, which makes the actual cook move fast. I wouldn’t fully cook the steak and vegetables in advance unless you’re okay with a softer texture after reheating.

How do I keep the sauce from getting too salty?+

Use low-sodium soy sauce if your BBQ sauce already runs salty. The brown sugar matters here because it rounds out the salt, so cutting that too hard can make the sauce taste sharper than you want.

Can I serve this over rice or noodles?+

Yes, and both work well. Rice catches the sauce and keeps the dish hearty, while noodles turn it into more of a saucy skillet meal. Add a little extra sauce if you’re serving it over a starch so it doesn’t feel dry.

Blackstone Cowboy Stir Fry

Blackstone cowboy stir fry with steak strips, colorful peppers, onions, and corn in a savory soy-BBQ sauce. Griddle cooking gives quick searing and fast-tender vegetables for a hearty beef stir fry.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 35 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American-Asian Fusion
Calories: 590

Ingredients
  

Blackstone cowboy stir fry
  • 1.5 lb sirloin steak
  • 2 bell peppers
  • 1 onion
  • 2 cup corn kernels
  • 3 tbsp oil
  • 0.25 cup soy sauce
  • 2 tbsp BBQ sauce
  • 2 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
  • 2 tbsp brown sugar
  • 4 garlic
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • 1 green onions for garnish

Equipment

  • 1 cast iron skillet

Method
 

Griddle and sear the steak
  1. Heat the Blackstone griddle to high heat, then add the oil and swirl to coat.
  2. Season the sirloin steak with salt and pepper and cook for 3-4 minutes until seared, then set aside.
Cook the vegetables
  1. Add the bell peppers and onions to the griddle and cook for 5-6 minutes until softened.
  2. Add the corn kernels and garlic and cook for 2 minutes.
Sauce, toss, and finish
  1. Combine the soy sauce, BBQ sauce, Worcestershire sauce, and brown sugar, then pour the mixture over the vegetables.
  2. Return the steak to the griddle, toss everything together for 2-3 minutes until coated and hot, and finish with green onions for garnish.

Notes

For best griddle results, slice the steak thin and spread it out in a single layer so it sears instead of steaming. Store leftovers in a sealed container in the refrigerator up to 3 days; reheat in a hot skillet or on the Blackstone until warmed through. Freezing isn’t recommended due to vegetable texture. Dietary swap: use coconut aminos instead of soy sauce for a gluten-free alternative (still check BBQ sauce labels for gluten).

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