One-pot Sriracha Sauce recipe takes 30 minutes to make. Soggy beef, clumpy sauce, that one time I used way too much sriracha and couldn’t feel my tongue for an hour. But after years of testing (and failing), this stir-fry beef with sriracha sauce is the winner. It’s quick and punchy, using ingredients that are friendly to a food reserve. No work? No problem. A regular skillet works fine.
You get crisp veggies and toasty beef. Spicy-sweet sauce coats every bite. Ready in under 20 minutes. Let’s cook.
Why this recipe works
- Baking soda magic trick – baking soda tenderises cheap beef cuts like flank or sirloin. No more chewing rubber
- Sriracha isn’t heat – it brings garlic, tang, and slight sweetness, balanced with soy and honey.
- High heat + cornstarch = sauce that coats, not pools.
- One pan – less cleanup, more flavor (brown bits = gold).
(Pro tip: don’t use a nonstick pan if you want that sear. Medium-high heat needs a sturdy surface.)
Ingredients
For the beef & marinade:
- 1 lb flank steak (or sirloin), thinly sliced against the grain
- 1 tbsp low-sodium soy sauce
- 1 tsp baking soda (yes, really – tenderizer)
- 1 tbsp cornflour
- 1 tbsp water
For the stir-fry beef with sriracha sauce:
- 2 tbsp sriracha (adjust down if you’re spice shy)
- 2 tbsp soy sauce (regular or tamari)
- 1 tbsp honey
- 1 tbsp rice vinegar
- 2 cloves of garlic, minced
- 1 tsp sesame oil
- ¼ cup beef broth or water
Stir-fry aromatics & veggies:
- 2 tbsp neutral oil (avocado or vegetable)
- 1 red bell pepper, sliced
- 1 small onion, sliced
- 3 green onions, chopped (white + green parts separate)
- Sesame seeds for garnish
How to make stir-fry beef with sriracha sauce (step by step)
1. Marinate the beef – don’t skip this
Slice your beef into thin pieces against the grain. That’s key. Mix the beef with soy sauce, baking soda, cornstarch, and water. Let it sit for 10 minutes while you prepare the veggies.
The first time I tried this, I skipped the baking soda. Tough as shoe leather. Never again.
2. Make your sriracha sauce
In a small bowl, whisk sriracha, soy sauce, honey, rice vinegar, garlic, sesame oil, and broth. The mixture smells sweet, sharp, and slightly spicy. Set aside.
3. Sear the beef – hot pan, don’t crowd
Heat 1 tbsp oil in a skillet over medium-high until it shimmers. Add the beef in a single layer. Let it sit untouched for 60 seconds – you want a brown crust. Then toss for 1-2 minutes until just cooked through. Remove the beef to a plate.
Crowding the pan = steaming. Steaming = sad, grey beef.
4. Stir-fry the veggies in the same pan
Add the remaining 1 tbsp of oil. Toss in the bell pepper, onion, and white parts of the green onion. Stir-fry for 2 minutes – they should stay crisp-tender, not mushy. Listen for that loud sizzle. That’s flavour.
5. Sauce + beef back in
Pour your sriracha sauce into the pan. Let it bubble for 30 seconds – it’ll thicken slightly. Add the beef back in, toss everything to coat. Cook 1 more minute. The sauce should turn glossy and dark orange-red.
6. Finish & serve
Top with green onion and sesame seeds. Serve over rice or noodles—or eat straight from the pan. No judgment.t.
Reader tip from my kitchen
For a little extra texture, try a pinch of crushed red pepper flakes at the end. Optional, but my spice-loving friends love it.
What to serve with stir-fry beef with sriracha sauce
- To round out your meal, steamed white rice absorbs heat effectively.
- Cold cucumber salad – cools down the sriracha kick.
- Quick pickled carrots & daikon (add tangy crunch)
- Fried egg on top – wait, try that. Runny yolk + spicy sauce = heaven
Related Recipies
Storage & freezing
Fridge: Keeps 3-4 days in an airtight container. The sauce may seep—just stir before reheating.
Freezer: Yes, but skip the veggies. Freeze beef and sauce in separate containers for a maximum of 2 months. Thaw overnight, then stir-fry fresh veggies. Reheat in a hot skillet, not the microwave (gets rubbery).
Reheat trick: Splash of water or broth in a pan over medium heat. Cover for 1 minute, then uncover and toss. Brings back the saucy life.
Conclusion
Have you ever triggered your smoke alarm while cooking stir-fry by accident? (Me, twice.) Or do you have a secret sriracha hack? Drop it in the comments – I’m always looking for new ways to burn my tongue with joy. And if you try this stir-fry beef with sriracha sauce, tag me so I can see that glossy, spicy glory.