My husband and I went out to eat at P.F. Changs once and our waiter brought us a plate of Mongolian beef and said that it got made for another table by mistake and they didn’t want it so he offered it to us. We had never tried it so we said yes and now it’s one of our favorite meals and we order it every time we go there!
Unfortunately, we don’t go very often so I decided to find a recipe online to make it at home. This doesn’t really taste the same as P.F. Changs Mongolian beef, but it’s still so good!
I don’t know where I got this recipe. I just typed Mongolian beef into google a year or two ago and
this is from one of the links that I clicked on.
Ingredients
2 teaspoons vegetable oil
1/2 teaspoon ginger; minced
1 tablespoon garlic; chopped
1/2 cup soy sauce
1/2 cup water
3/4 cup dark brown sugar
vegetable oil, for frying; (about 1 cup)
1 lb flank steak
1/4 cup cornstarch
2 large green onions
How to make it
Make the sauce by heating 2 tsp of vegetable oil in a medium saucepan over med/low heat.
Don’t get the oil too hot. Add ginger and garlic to the pan and quickly add the soy sauce and water before the garlic scorches. Dissolve the brown sugar in the sauce, then raise the heat to about medium and boil the sauce for 2-3 minutes or until the sauce thickens. Remove it from the heat.
Slice the flank steak against the grain into 1/4″ thick bite-size slices. Tilt the blade of your knife at about a forty five degree angle to the top of the steak so that you get wider cuts. Dip the steak pieces into the cornstarch to apply a very thin dusting to both sides of each piece of beef. Let the beef sit for about 10 minutes so that the cornstarch sticks.
As the beef sits, heat up one cup of oil in a wok (you may also use a skillet for this step as long as the beef will be mostly covered with oil).
Heat the oil over medium heat until it’s nice and hot, but not smoking.
Add the beef to the oil and sauté for just two minutes, or until the beef just begins to darken on the edges.
You don’t need a thorough cooking here since the beef is going to go back on the heat later.
Stir the meat around a little so that it cooks evenly.
After a couple minutes, use a large slotted spoon to take the meat out and onto paper towels, then pour the oil out of the wok or skillet.
Put the pan back over the heat, dump the meat back into it and simmer for one minute.
Add the sauce, cook for one minute while stirring, then add all the green onions.
Cook for one more minute, then remove the beef and onions with tongs or a slotted spoon to a serving plate. Leave the excess sauce behind in the pan.
Thanks for stopping by!!
Yum,. I love Mongolian Beef, and I’ve been looking for a few recipes to try. I did a crockpot version a few weeks ago. I think I’ll try this one too! Thanks for sharing!
I know, doesn’t it sound good? 🙂 I was at Walmart yesterday and saw one of those frozen meals and HAD to buy it because I like to take the lazy way out most of the time. I still want to try this recipe though! Thanks for stopping by Emily!