Mongolian Ground Beef
This Mongolian ground beef is a flavorful and cost-effective alternative to the classic. It’s a healthier soy-free alternative that’s paleo, whole30, and AIP friendly.
Mongolian beef is made with steak (usually flank steak) that is coated in a starch (like corn starch or arrowroot) to make it crispy and then combined with a soy sauce-based sauce and green onions. It’s a flavorful and hearty dish that tastes great with rice and veggies!
However, I don’t have Mongolian Beef as often because of the expensive steak cuts that are used. I always have the much cheaper and easier to work with ground beef on hand and decided to modify this recipe to be made with ground beef.
It’s cheaper, it’s easier, and it’s just as yummy! This recipe is a healthier alternative made paleo, gluten-free, soy-free, whole30, and AIP.
Why you’ll love this recipe
- It’s flavor-packed! It has all of the flavors you love about Mongolian beef!
- It’s cost-effective. Ground beef is a cheaper alternative to steak, making this a much more cost-effective meal.
The Ingredients You’ll Need
- Ground beef. To make this Mongolian beef cheaper and easier for a weeknight meal!
- Coconut aminos. This a soy-free alternative to soy sauce. If you can tolerate other alternatives, those will also work.
- Broth . You can use a broth of your choice, but I think chicken broth works best.
- Arrowroot starch. This a grain-free thickener that helps to thicken the sauce. I haven’t tried tapioca starch as it’s a bit gummier, but I do prefer arrowroot for sauces.
- Green onions, ginger and garlic. These add tons of flavor to the dish and I recommend using fresh ingredients rather than dried.
How to make Mongolian Ground Beef
- Cook the ground beef. Brown the ground beef on medium heat, adding salt and pepper. Once the beef is browned, set aside, leaving about 2 tbsp of fat in the pan.
- Prep and cook the sauce. Whisk together the coconut aminos, broth, apple cider vinegar, coconut sugar, and arrowroot starch. Set aside. Using the same pan, bring the heat to low-medium heat and add the garlic and ginger to the pan. Cook for 2-3 minutes or until fragrant. Pour the sauce into the pan and stir. Allow to heat and thick for 1-2 minutes.
- Add the ground beef back to the pan and stir well to coat with the sauce. Add the green onions and cook for 2-3 minutes or until softened.
Tips & Tricks
- Add more broth to thin out the sauce. This sauce winds up being thick like traditional Mongolian beef. If you prefer a thinner sauce, add a bit more beef broth.
What to serve with Mongolian Beef
- Roasted bok choy. I love adding bok choy as a veggie compliment to a myriad of Asian dishes.
- Cauliflower rice (or rice if tolerated)
- Stir-fried vegetables. I like having stir-fried vegetables like these with recipes like this.
You’ll also love…
Mongolian Ground Beef
Ingredients
- 1 lb ground beef
- 1 tsp sea salt
- ¼ tsp black pepper, omit for AIP
- ⅓ cup coconut aminos
- ¼ cup broth
- 1 tsp apple cider vinegar
- 2 tsp coconut sugar, omit for whole30
- 1 tbsp + 1 tsp arrowroot starch
- 1 thumb ginger, grated
- 3 cloves garlic, minced
- 4 green onions, sliced into 1" slices
Instructions
- Using a large skillet, brown the ground beef on medium heat, adding salt and pepper. Once the beef is browned, set aside, leaving about 2 tbsp of fat in the pan.
- In a seperate bowl, whisk together the coconut aminos, broth, apple cider vinegar, coconut sugar, and arrowroot starch. Set aside.
- Using the same pan, bring the heat to low-medium heat and add the garlic and ginger to the pan. Cook for 2-3 minutes or until fragrant.
- Pour the sauce into the pan and stir. Allow to heat and thick for 1-2 minutes.
- Add the ground beef back to the pan and stir well to coat with the sauce. Add the green onions and cook for 2-3 minutes or until softened.
- Serve fresh over cauliflower rice or with vegetables of your choice.
Notes
This recipe was originally published is 2019 and updated in 2023. Photos by Modern Food Stories.
One of the best recipes I have made. I omitted the sugar and did not miss it. Can’t wait to try with Bok Choy and maybe other veggies. Lots of flavor and very fast and easy to make.
Thank you!!
Will this freeze well and reheat well?
It should yes!
WOWOWOW!! That’s literally what I’ve been saying after every bite of this I’ve been trying to teach myself more healthy recipes and this is the first one of yours I’ve tried! Super easy and super DELISH! I paired it with cauli rice and I cannot get over how yummy this meal is. Thank you so much! 🙂
Thank you!!
So good and easy. The sauce is so flavorful. Its definitely going into our rotation now.
yay, so glad!!
just wrote a review to thank you, Michele and did not do the star’s
I want to thank you for this recipe!!!. My diet is basically AIP most of the time. This is because of health issues. One of the problems is that i cannot chew meat unless ground and in little pieces. Not being a good cook (although I am quite talented in burning my food- ha ha), it never occurred to me that I could use ground beef instead! And this whole recipe is safe allergy/reaction-wise for me. THANK you – I don’t eat much now because I have only one choice, no imagination, and just don’t much like to cook. (no dairy, soy, gluten, legumes, nightshade, etc. and no crunchy stuff like salad, granola or soft or liquid (eg smoothie) on an empty stomach. Not wanting sympathy – I just want you to know how helpful your info is to some of us!!! THANK YOU, Thank you!!
So glad you are enjoying this recipe!!
Only one I made change was to reduce salt to 1/2 tsp.
Thank you!!
Love this recipe! It’s one of the best AIP recipes I’ve come across. Versatile in that you can add mushrooms or broccoli. Make it your own. I also prefer coconut secret brand aminos to the others. Thank you!
Thank you! So glad you love it!
Could I use allulose instead of coconut sugar?
I’m not familiar enough with cooking with allulose to know whether this would work well.
We’ve made this recipe multiple times now. Always a hit with kids and adults alike. We love it!
So glad!!
Nice and easy to make
The flavor is good, but the texture is too gooey. Every time I use Arrow Root this happens. Ugh.
You can add 2 tbsp of broth or so the thin out the texture!
Hi! This looks so good, but it is not Whole30 since there is coconut sugar in it. Has anyone made it without?
Yup, it says omit for whole30 🙂 You can make it without it and it’ll still taste great.
It was good! I omitted the coconut sugar, I think next time I’ll add some veggies in!
So glad you enjoyed it! I love adding stir fried vegetables in!
This is such a great recipe! Super simple for week nights but not skimping on flavor. We added bokchoy and served over rice. We’ll definitely be making this one again