This incredible Beef in Black Bean Sauce recipe is from Hannah, a chef at RecipeTin Meals, and it’s the best I’ve ever had! Born and raised in China, Hannah comes from a multigenerational family of chefs. So unsurprisingly, she has extremely high standards when it comes to Chinese food!!

Beef in black bean sauce is finally here!
Beef in black bean sauce has been one of the most requested reader recipes for years, but I haven’t been brave enough to share it because I never felt my sauce was quite right. This is a beloved Chinese restaurant classic that needs to be done properly!
As it turns out though, we have a brilliant Chinese chef at our food bank – Chef Hannah – and we’ve been using her Beef in black bean sauce recipe at RecipeTin Meals for almost a year, making meals for the vulnerable. Her recipe is a dead ringer for gold standard Chinese restaurants – but better, because you can taste the ingredients more.
This is Chef Hannah, making the Beef in Black Bean at RTM. Just 600 servings!



70% cheaper – and counting
The other big thing this homemade version has going for it is that you’ll also save a bomb – almost 70% of the cost. Higher end Chinese restaurants charge over $30 for a serving about one-third of the size of what this recipe makes. The ingredients to make this at home will cost you less than $25. Closer to $15 if you use the economical beef option which, hand on heart, is 95% as good. I was blown away by how good it was! More on this in the ingredients section below.

Ingredients in beef in black bean sauce
We are making the black bean sauce from scratch today because it tastes way better than the jarred stuff which, to be honest, barely resembles the real deal. So the key ingredient in today’s recipe is the black beans, and yes you will need to go to an Asian store. But they’re cheap ($2.50 for small packs), common and will last *forever* (though I’ll wager you use them all up making this recipe over and over – try it with chicken next!).
Once you get the black beans though, you’ll be happy to know that all the other ingredients are basic Asian sauce essentials. 🙂
1. PRESERVED black beans for Chinese black beans sauce
This is what preserved black beans looks like – shrivelled up raisins:


What Chinese salted black beans are – black soy beans that have been fermented in salt which add savouriness and salt into the dish. They are a little squishy – like extra firm raisins.
Other names – Preserved black beans are also called:
Salted or fermented black beans
Any combination of the above: eg salted preserved black beans
Black beans (in an Asian grocer, not a Western grocer – see note above!)
Douchi (dòu chǐ in Mandarin or dau6si6 in Cantonese, 豆豉 – thank you for the language lesson Woks of Life!)
Find them at Asian grocery stores alongside pickled and vac packed vegetables. They cost around $2.70 for the smallest packs.
No suitable substitute that I can think of.
Not to be confused with Western dried black beans which are rock hard. Canned black beans (ie regular Western ones) cannot be used, they are not the same thing (see above – salted black beans are actually soy beans!).
2. BEEF AND MARINADE
Here’s what you need for the beef and marinade.

Beef (rump steak) – The base recipe calls for rump steak (US: top sirloin) – for flavour, value and texture. Scotch/rib eye and porterhouse/sirloin (strip) are also great but more expensive.
Economical cuts (65% cheaper) – blade roast (brilliant!) and chuck work extremely well, however, the recipe needs to be alternated for a longer marinade time (24 hours instead of 1 hour). See expandable accordion below for more information.
Beef options
Rump steak – called top sirloin in the US. Reason: good beefy flavour, good chew but not tough, not too tender (fillet is too tender, in my opinion), doesn’t take long to tenderise in the marinade (1 hour), is one of the more economical steaks.
These work just as well as rump but they didn’t make it better. As they are more expensive, we opted not to use them for the base recipe.
We’ve tested this recipe using economical beef cuts – and the results were incredible! I was so excited to find how well it works with cheaper beef cuts. But there’s a catch – you need to either marinade for longer (24 hours instead of 1 hour) OR use a more aggressive tenderising technique (outlined below) which is faster but a two-step process (1 hour 40 minutes). See next drop down for details, or recipe card.
Here are the top recommended economical beef cut options:
Blade Roast ($13/kg here in Australia, 65% cheaper than rump), also called bolar blade or chuck blade. Excellent flavour, excellent texture once tenderised, easy to cut, easily found at regular grocery stores. Full marks!
Chuck beef – came in a close second. Similar texture once tenderised but the beef flavour is not quite as strong and it is a little more fiddly to slice (fat and tendons get in the way).
Brisket – Haven’t tried specifically for this recipe but given the above 2 work so well and having extensively tested various beef cuts for baking soda tenderising times in my second cookbook, Tonight, I am confident it will work.
Gravy beef will work but because of the way the meat fibres run, it can be fiddly to cut stir-fry-size meat strips.
Other economical cuts – topside (called round steak or roast in the US and UK – bottom, top, eye)
Blade roast is a slow cooking cut of meat which comes from the same area of the cow as chuck beef that is commonly used for stews and similar slow cooked recipes. In Australia it is usually sold in roast / block form ~1.5kg+/3lb. So you’ll have to buy more than you need for a single batch of this recipe, but it freezes perfectly for all your future beef stir fry needs! It’s also a cut that is easy to slice into lots of thin pieces for stir fries because it’s not ribboned with sinew and fat that can be fiddly to cut around. Find it at regular grocery stores!
Chuck beef is not as uniform in shape as blade and requires a bit more fiddling to cut around sinew and fat to get the beef slices. Also, the beef flavour is not quite as strong. Because of these reasons, it came in second!
Use either of these two methods if you’d like to use the economical beef cuts for this recipe:
Extended marinade – Follow the recipe as written, but leave the beef to marinade for 24 hours rather than 1 hour.
Two-step fast tenderise – Toss the plain beef slices with 1 1/4 teaspoons baking soda and set aside for 40 minutes to tenderise (this is basic beef velveting – more information here). Rinse in a colander, shake and pat off excess water. Then marinade per recipe but leave out the baking soda and proceed with the recipe as written.
Because this recipe calls for a fair amount of beef (400g/14oz) compared to regular beef stir fries (typically 200g/7oz or less). Also, this is an iconic dish and I want everyone to be able to enjoy this without worrying about cost.
JB made 6 versions of this recipe side by side using various cuts of beef and different tenderising methods, using the knowledge and previous testing I’ve done on velveting beef, both for this website (velveting beef post here) and my cookbook Tonight which has a double page cheat sheet on how to tenderise meat for stir fries.
We knew it could be done for Beef in Black Bean Sauce and expected it to be pretty good – say, 85% as good which, if you can save more than 50% on the cost of beef, is still quite good, in my view.
We did not expect it to be as good as it is! Hand on heart, I honestly say that blade is 95% as good as rump steak. We were so amazed, and so excited to be able to share this tip in today’s recipe!
Tender, very lean, most expensive cut of beef, we feel it’s wasted in stir fries. Hannah actually made this recipe using tenderloin but said she didn’t like it – the beef doesn’t colour nicely, it also gets a little too weirdly tender when tenderised (which you still have to do because in stir fries, any thin strip of beef overcooks) and it also doesn’t have a very strong beef flavour so it gets completely overwhelmed by the sauce.
skirt
flank
similar cuts popular in South American grilling
pre cut stir fry strips
cheek
short rib / beef rib
shank
minute steak / sizzle steak (ie the very thin steaks)

Marinade
Baking soda (bicarbonate) – A small amount (just 1/4 teaspoons) mixed into the marinade tenderises the beef beautifully so it stays soft. Without, the beef will overcook and become tough. I tried and proven tenderising method used liberally in my Asian recipes!
Light soy sauce – You can substitute with an all purpose soy sauce. But not dark soy sauce – flavour is too strong and the colour is too intense! More on which soy sauce to use when here.
Dark soy sauce – Stains the beef and adds more intense soy flavour than light soy. You can substitute with more light soy sauce but the beef colour will not be the same and the flavour will be a little lighter.
Oyster sauce – A staple Asian sauce that adds complexity, flavour and umami all at once. Made from oyster extract that is sweet, salty, thick and pungent, but doesn’t taste oyster-y or fishy at all once cooked. Can be substituted with shellfish free alternative – vegetarian “oyster” sauce, even found at regular grocery stores these days.
Cornflour / cornstarch – This makes the beef cook so it has a thin film-like coating on it which makes it sort of slippery, just like you get at Chinese restaurants.
3. THE STIR FRY AND SAUCE
Here’s what you need for the sauce and the vegetables in the stir fry. The sauce is very simple and only uses 1 tablespoon of soy sauce because this dish gets most of its flavour from the black beans.

Chinese cooking wine (“Shaoxing wine”)- essential ingredient for making truly “restaurant standard” Chinese dishes. Substitute with cooking sake or dry sherry. Non alcoholic substitute – substitute half the water with low sodium chicken stock/broth.
Light soy – see notes in the above section. Don’t use dark soy sauce, it’s too intense!
Cornflour / cornstarch – thickens the sauce and makes it shiny.
Sugar – to get the right sweetness in the sauce
Water – quite a lot, a whole cup! There’s a lot of stir fry. We need plenty of sauce!
Green capsicum / bell pepper – the traditional colour for beef in black bean here in Australia. Feel free to go wild and use red or yellow if you want. 😳 (I’m not rebellious enough).
Onion and garlic – Try to find a stir fry recipe on my website that doesn’t have these. (You won’t!). The onion is cut into squares which is the traditional shape used for this dish in Chinese restaurants.
Oil – for cooking. Peanut oil, canola, vegetable oil – anything with a neutral flavour.
How to make Beef in black bean sauce
The beef needs 1 hour to marinade to infuse with flavour and tenderise. Use this time to soak the black beans and prepare the other ingredients. The cooking part itself takes barely 10 minutes!
1. Marinade

Slice – Finely slice the beef into 3mm / 0.1″ thick pieces.
Pro tip (optional): If you just slice steak, the beef pieces are quite skinny. For nice large pieces aka restaurant style, cut 2.5 x 4cm pieces (1 x 1.5″) pieces out of the steak, stand on its side then slice finely so you get larger 2.5 x 4cm pieces (1 x 1.5″) slices.
Marinade – Mix all the marinade ingredients except the sesame oil. Then toss to coat the beef, then add the sesame oil and toss. Adding the sesame oil later helps to “seal” the marinade ingredients into the beef.
Marinade for 1 hour in the fridge. (Remember: if using economical beef, marinade 24 hours).
2. SOAKING the preserved black BEANS

Soak black beans in water for 30 minutes to 1 hour. They will plump up and soften so they’re pleasant to bite into and release more flavour into the sauce.
Drain – Then drain in a colander and just put it aside until ready to cook.
3. HOW TO COOK BEEF IN BLACK BEAN SAUCE
For real restaurant style, the beef needs to be shallow fried which makes the surface of the beef slippery and softer than sautéing. However, I promise you are still going to love this if you opt to just sauté in a little oil instead!

Shallow fry beef – Heat the oil over high heat in a wok then cook the beef for 1 minute until it changes from red to brown. If opting for the less oil option, just heat 2 tablespoons of oil then stir the beef for 45 seconds like you’re making a regular beef stir fry, until the surface of all the beef is cooked.
Cooking vessel – Wok works best because you get more oil depth though it works well in a pan too. Use a large deep one as this recipe makes a fairly generous amount!
Remove the beef using a slotted spoon onto a plate.

Discard most of the oil but keep 3 tablespoons for cooking.
Aromatics first – Cook the black beans first for 20 seconds, then add the garlic and stir for 10 seconds. Add the onions and capsicum first and stir for 1 minute until the edges of the onion starts to soften.

Beef and Chinese cooking wine – Add the beef and toss for 30 seconds. Then pour the Chinese cooking wine around the rim of the wok so it runs down the side into the beef. This is a classic Chinese cooking technique that “cooks” the wine before mixing with everything else. (It’s not a big deal if you miss though and the wine goes straight into the beef!).
Add the sauce and cook for another minute or until the sauce thickens, becomes shiny and thick enough to coat the beef.
Pour it all into a serving bowl and serve with rice!
Look at this saucy perfection with those little pops of black beans and that beef, that unbelievably tender beef!!

And a nice close up rice soakage shot for you:

Wow. Just wow.
Thank you Chef Hannah, for this incredible recipe. While we’ve been using this at RTM for a while, the recipe is slightly different because we cook at scale there (600x), we use commercial equipment and the food is designed to be reheated.
So Hannah altered the recipe to make it suitable for home kitchens, and tweaked it to aim for gold-standard Chinese restaurant quality.
She absolutely nailed it. I really hope you give this a go! Hand on heart, I’ve never had better. – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
Hungry for more? Subscribe to my newsletter and follow along on Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram for all of the latest updates.

Beef in black bean sauce
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup (75g) preserved black beans (salted black beans, fermented black beans, Note 1)
- 400g/14 oz beef rump steak (US: top sirloin) , thinly sliced 3mm / 0.1" (Note 2)
- 1 brown onion , medium size, cut into 2.5cm/1" squares
- 1 green capsicum (bell pepper), medium size, cut into 2.5cm/1" squares
- 1 tbsp garlic , finely minced with a knife ~ 4 cloves (Note 3)
- 1/2 cup peanut oil (or vegetable, canola) (Note 4)
- 1 tbsp Chinese cooking wine (shaoxing wine) (Note 5)
Tenderising beef marinade:
- 1 tbsp light soy sauce (Note 6)
- 1 tsp dark soy sauce (Note 6)
- 1 tbsp oyster sauce
- 2 tsp cornflour / cornstarch
- 1/4 tsp baking soda (bi-carbonate) (Note 7)
- 1 tbsp sesame oil (toasted ie brown, not untoasted which is yellow)
Sauce:
- 1 tbsp light soy sauce (Note 6)
- 2 tsp white sugar
- 2 tbsp cornflour/cornstarch (20g)
- 1 cup water
Serving:
Instructions
Abbreviated recipe:
- Marinade beef 1 hour, soak beans, mix sauce. Shallow fry beef 30 seconds, remove. Discard all but 3 tbsp oil. Add and cook in this order: black beans 20 seconds, garlic 10 seconds, onion + capsicum 1 minute, beef 1 minute, cooking wine 30 seconds, sauce 1 minute or until thickened. Serve!
Marinade beef:
- Mix the marinade ingredients EXCEPT sesame oil in a bowl. Add beef, mix to coat. Add sesame oil, mix again.
- Marinade – Refrigerate to marinade for 1 hour.
Preparation:
- Soak beans – Put the salted black beans in a medium bowl and cover with water. Set aside for 30 minutes to 1 hour to soak, then drain.
- Mix sauce – Put the cornflour, soy sauce and sugar in a jug or small bowl. Mix until lump free then mix in the water. Set aside.
Cooking:
- Cook beef – Heat the oil in a wok (or non stick pan) over high heat. Add the beef and cook, tossing, for 30 seconds until it changes from red to brown. Remove with a slotted spoon onto a plate.
- Discard most of the oil in the wok, keep just 3 tablespoons.
- Aromatics – Return the wok to high heat. Add the black beans and stir for 20 seconds, then add the garlic and stir for 10 seconds. Add the capsicum and onion, cook for 1 minute.
- Beef – Add beef and any juices pooled on the plate, toss for 1 minute. Pour the Chinese cooking wine around the sides of the wok so it runs down into the beef then toss for 30 seconds (Note 8)
- Sauce – Pour the sauce in, then stir and let it bubble for 1 minute or until the sauce thickens, is shiny and coats the beef beautifully.
- Serve – Pour into a serving bowl and serve with rice!
Recipe Notes:
b) Toss beef with 1¼ tsp baking soda, refrigerate 40 min, rinse well. Then marinate 30 min (without baking soda) and proceed with recipe. Chuck also works, but blade is easier to slice. Other options: brisket, gravy beef, topside/round. Use either a) or b) tenderising methods for these too. More info in Ingredients section. 3. Garlic – Knife best. If using a garlic crusher, add the garlic towards end of onion cooking time (else it will burn). 4. Oil quantity – To truly replicate restaurant silky soft beef, it needs to be shallow fried rather than sautéed. To reduce, use 3 tbsp and sauté the beef instead. 5. Chinese cooking wine (“Shaoxing wine”)– essential ingredient for making truly “restaurant standard” Chinese dishes. Substitute with cooking sake or dry sherry. Non alcoholic sub – substitute half the water with low sodium chicken stock/broth. 6. Soy sauces – Light soy sauce: you can use any all purpose soy sauce but do not use dark soy or sweet soy. Dark soy: can substitute with light or all purpose soy but will lose colour and a bit of soy flavour. More information on soy sauces here. 7. Baking soda is a magic meat tenderiser! More in post or here. 8. Pouring Shaoxing wine around the side of the wok – traditional Chinese cooking technique so it “cooks” the wine before it reaches the ingredients. Leftovers will keep for 3 days in the fridge, keeps very well. Not suitable for freezing (sauce thins). Nutrition per serving, assuming 5 servings, excluding rice. I feel like the sodium is higher than it actually is because salt gets extracted during the soaking step.
Nutrition Information:
Life of Dozer
He genuinely thinks that’s his food bowl:

Buying the salted black beans was a game changer. There are a few ingredients but I had almost all of them already. This is a winner. So delicious, restaurant quality.
Really keen on trying this!
Can’t get fermented beans or black bean paste as live regionally.
Can I create my own black beans paste from a can of black beans and add spices to get that flavour?
Or just add soy sauce to a can of drained beans to get that umami flavour and a bit of vinegar for fermented tang?
Or just use miso paste instead?
Or use fish sauce with beans to create extra salty umami?
🙂
Hi Ena – do note that in her recipe, Nagi says that tinned black beans are *not* the same as salted black beans (salted black beans are soy beans, rather than the type you use for Mexican dishes), so substitutes probably won’t get the same results.
Thanks Jo, not the same but I guess it could be similar.
AI suggests;
You can make a very good black bean paste substitute using canned black beans and a few pantry ingredients. Here’s how your options stack up, and a quick DIY suggestion:
1. Canned black beans + soy sauce + vinegar
Pros: Easy, basic umami flavor, customizable.
Cons: Lacks the depth and funk of fermentation.
2. Add miso paste to mashed beans
Pros: Miso is fermented, so you regain that deep, savory funk.
Cons: Different flavor profile than fermented black beans, but very tasty.
3. Add fish sauce
Pros: Brings a punchy, salty umami hit.
I was thinking to try one these 3 as they sound great alternatives. When you live out in the country and 8 hours drive from a big city you gotta get creative… 😅🙏
Delicious! My family loved this recipe, so much better than at a restaurant! I added mushrooms and green beans for extra vegetables.
These were magnificent! Made exactly per the recipe (except a few extra black beans) and I think one of my favourite Chinese recipes from the RecipeTin team!
This was excellent!! Another winner, thanks team!
Question – how do I store the left over black beans? And how long will they keep?
This was incredible! Better than any beef in black bean if had at even the best Chinese restaurants. The tip with the meat slicing makes a huge difference. Another one to add to the list from ‘No fail Nagi’ as we like to call her in my household.
Hi Nagi. I would like to know the best way to store unused beans once the pack is opened. Also after soaking and draining, I noticed the liquid very flavoursome and wondering if it could be used like a stock? Thanks Mark
To store unused fermented black beans, transfer them to an airtight container, such as a sealed jar, and place them in the refrigerator. They will typically keep well for several months, even for up to 24 months in the fridge
I’m planning on using this liquid for the sauce next time I make it (instead of the 1 cup of water) as I felt it lacked – something!
Another absolutely amazing recipe. Absolute restaurant quality! I will definitely cook these again.
Can i use black beans that come in a tin?
No – see note 1 🙂
Loved this recipe! First time that I have made a dish like and it will not be the last! It was difficult finding the beans but well worth the effort. This has become a household favourite already.
Hi Nagi- thanks to you and Hannah for this new recipe! We’re long time fans of your site and books and talk about you to everyone 🙂. We made this recipe last night and were a little bit disappointed with a bitter taste and a lack of flavour so wanted to ask you what could have contributed? This is the first time we’ve used fermented black beans and the ones we bought were almost at their use by date. Secondly, I forgot the beans were soaking and left them in the water for an hour and a half! Thirdly, I rinsed them after draining them ( I think as if they were lentils-did it without thinking!!!). How critical were those mistakes? There was a distinct lack of salty flavour. We aim to try again to make sure there wasn’t any other issues but any light you can add would be welcome. Thank you 🤗
I made this for dinner tonight, super easy and taste just like you would get at a chinese restaurant. Had most ingredients already at home just had to pick up the rump and beans!
Made this for dinner tonight. I marinated the meat about 3 hours, and everything went smoothly. The sauce was a bit too thick at the end though. I have enough to make tomorrow night so will reduce the amount of cornflour.
Beautifully balanced, authentic, delicious and so tender. Followed the recipe exactly. The only change I’d make next time is using less cornstarch in the sauce as mine thickened up way too much! When I reheat these leftovers (can’t wait!) I’ll thin it out with some water and it’ll be perfect 👌 Thank you Hannah, and Nagi for this winner!
PS I used Aldi Australian rump steak…it’s less than $20/kg!
Nagi….winner winner 🏆
This was so delicious and not salty. Plenty of sauce and so quick to cook.
Tony (hubby) says thank you too 😉
This is a cracker of a recipe!! So easy to put together and not too much forward planning, which is my usual downfall.
1 hr 15 min (including soaking and marinating) from start to going on the table. I’ve been craving a good beef and black bean but can’t seem to find a good one at local restaurants. I shall crave and be disappointed no more. Thanks yet again you and your team have given us the perfect recipe.
One thing though, I will cook it outside next time. I had quite a lot of oil spatter. Maybe I’ll try to reduce the oil? I’m also keen try it with other meats.
Is it possible to substitute Shin mirin for the Shao Xing?
Hi Nagi.
I’d love to make this recipe and I’m hoping you might have some tip for me. I have found sted black beans at my Asian grocery however they are preserved in soy sauce and I cannot find an alternative.
As a celiac, soy sauce is a no go. Do you have a good to brand of black beans that doesn’t contain soy sauce or know a way around this problem?
That sounds really good! As everything you come up with. Do you think I can use fermented salted beans with ginger in it? It was the only thing the Asian store had.
Best regards from Sweden
I made this tonight, and I got three servings for tonight’s dinner and two for lunches next week.
Really, simple to make and very tasty.
I used rump and tenderised as per note 2. The total cost for the 5 servings would be around $21, with the rump being $17 of that.
OMG – why have I not been tenderising beef every time I make a stir fry??!! Total game changer! Discovered a sad little quarter cup of black beans in the freezer and my first stop was Nagi (you never need a second). Not as much as required but still enough for an amazing flavour. Just waiting for the rice to cook which I hope is soon as I keep snatching tender pieces of beef out of the wok – there will be none left!
Made this for dinner last night (to rave reviews) and doubled the recipe as had extra family over.
I cooked the meat in two batches but everything else as described.
Served with steamed broccoli on the side for some extra veg and it was perfect, no need to scale up the sauce, this one is perfection!