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Home/Recipes/Stir-Fry Recipes

Stir-Fry Recipes

234 recipes

Panda Express Copycat Fried Rice with Eggs and Vegetables

Panda Express Copycat Fried Rice with Eggs and Vegetables

25 minAsian
Italian Cauliflower Risotto with Crispy Pancetta Breadcrumbs

Italian Cauliflower Risotto with Crispy Pancetta Breadcrumbs

1 hrItalian
Kolkata-Style Spicy Chili Chicken

Kolkata-Style Spicy Chili Chicken

45 minIndo- Chinese Fuision
Sticky Szechuan Pork Belly with Toasted Sesame Seeds

Sticky Szechuan Pork Belly with Toasted Sesame Seeds

2 hr 5 minChinese
Quick Chicken Stir-Fry with Chow Mein Noodles and Vegetables

Quick Chicken Stir-Fry with Chow Mein Noodles and Vegetables

20 min
Easy Chicken and Vegetable Stir-Fry with Ginger Soy Sauce

Easy Chicken and Vegetable Stir-Fry with Ginger Soy Sauce

40 min
Bacon Mushroom Cauliflower Rice Stir-Fry

Bacon Mushroom Cauliflower Rice Stir-Fry

25 min
Better than Takeout Shrimp Fried Rice with Vegetables

Better than Takeout Shrimp Fried Rice with Vegetables

40 minAsian American
Crispy Jalapeño Chicken with Sweet Soy Glaze

Crispy Jalapeño Chicken with Sweet Soy Glaze

40 minAsian
30-Minute Pan-Seared Orange Beef with Tapioca Crust

30-Minute Pan-Seared Orange Beef with Tapioca Crust

30 minChinese
Pan-Seared Szechuan Chicken with Ginger Stir-Fry

Pan-Seared Szechuan Chicken with Ginger Stir-Fry

35 minAmerican
30-Minute Paleo Mango Cashew Chicken Skillet

30-Minute Paleo Mango Cashew Chicken Skillet

30 minAmerican
Thai Pineapple Fried Rice with Shrimp and Curry Paste

Thai Pineapple Fried Rice with Shrimp and Curry Paste

30 minAmerican
Red Curry Fried Rice with Asparagus and Bell Pepper

Red Curry Fried Rice with Asparagus and Bell Pepper

45 minAmerican
Vegan Mushroom Ramen with Miso Broth and Rice Noodles

Vegan Mushroom Ramen with Miso Broth and Rice Noodles

37 minJapanese
Vegetable Wonton Soup with Ginger and Gochugaru

Vegetable Wonton Soup with Ginger and Gochugaru

50 minChinese
Stir-Fried Chicken Chop Suey with Mushrooms

Stir-Fried Chicken Chop Suey with Mushrooms

25 minChinese-American
Bourbon Chicken with Soy-Ginger Glaze

Bourbon Chicken with Soy-Ginger Glaze

25 minAmerican fusion
20-Minute Pineapple Fried Rice with Sweet and Savory Sauce

20-Minute Pineapple Fried Rice with Sweet and Savory Sauce

20 minAsian
Crispy Sweet and Sour Chicken with Pineapple

Crispy Sweet and Sour Chicken with Pineapple

30 minAmerican-Chinese
Sweet and Sour Vegetable Stir-Fry with Tangy Sauce

Sweet and Sour Vegetable Stir-Fry with Tangy Sauce

15 minChinese
Panda Express Firecracker Chicken Copycat Recipe

Panda Express Firecracker Chicken Copycat Recipe

25 minChinese
Panda Express Mushroom Chicken Copycat Stir-Fry Recipe

Panda Express Mushroom Chicken Copycat Stir-Fry Recipe

1 hrAsian
Healthy Thai Peanut Chicken Zucchini Noodles Recipe

Healthy Thai Peanut Chicken Zucchini Noodles Recipe

25 minThai
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Stir-frying cooks food fast over high heat while keeping everything moving. A proper stir-fry happens at 400-500°F in under 10 minutes. Your vegetables stay crisp, meat stays tender, and everything gets coated in sauce without steaming or stewing. The method came from Chinese cooking but works for any cuisine. The key difference between stir-frying and sautéing? Temperature and speed. Sautéing uses medium heat around 300°F. Stir-frying needs your burner cranked to maximum. You'll see smoke rising from the oil before adding ingredients. Everything must be prepped first. Once you start cooking, there's no time to chop. Cut vegetables into uniform 1/4-inch pieces so they cook at the same rate. Slice meat against the grain into strips no thicker than 1/8 inch. Mix your sauce in advance. The whole cooking process takes 3-7 minutes once the wok heats up. Add ingredients based on cooking time. Hard vegetables like carrots go in first, taking 2-3 minutes. Softer items like snow peas need just 30-60 seconds. Meat cooks in 1-2 minutes when sliced thin. The constant motion prevents burning while developing wok hei, that smoky flavor from oil vaporizing at high heat. A gas burner works better than electric because you need 15,000+ BTUs for restaurant-style results. Home stoves typically max out at 12,000 BTUs, so work in smaller batches. About 1 pound of food per batch keeps the temperature high. Too much food drops the pan temperature below 350°F and you end up steaming instead. Cornstarch helps here. Toss meat with 1 tablespoon cornstarch per pound before cooking. It forms a protective coating that keeps moisture in while creating a light crust. For vegetables, a 30-second blanch in boiling water before stir-frying ensures even cooking.

Best for: Stir-frying works best for dishes that combine vegetables with thin-sliced meat or seafood in a sauce. The method suits Asian noodle dishes, fried rice after the rice cools for 4+ hours, and any vegetable side dish you want crisp-tender in under 5 minutes.

Equipment

14-inch carbon steel wokHeats to 500°F faster than cast iron, weighs 3-4 pounds vs 8+ for cast iron, develops nonstick patina after 10-15 uses
Wok spatulaLong handle keeps hands 12+ inches from heat, curved edge matches wok shape for efficient tossing, metal construction handles 500°F temperatures
Gas burner or wok ringNeed minimum 12,000 BTUs for home cooking, wok ring stabilizes round-bottom woks on flat stoves, increases heat concentration by 20%
Spider strainer12-inch diameter removes blanched vegetables in 2 seconds, wire mesh construction drains instantly, bamboo handle stays cool
Prep bowlsNeed 6-8 small bowls for ingredients, everything cut and measured before heating wok, glass or metal handles quick temperature changes

FAQ

Why does my stir-fry turn out soggy?

Temperature drops below 350°F when you add too much food. Cook maximum 1 pound per batch in a 14-inch wok. Moisture escapes as steam above 400°F but pools as liquid below that threshold. Also check your vegetables. Frozen vegetables release water as they thaw. Fresh vegetables work better, or thaw frozen ones completely and pat dry with paper towels first.

Can I stir-fry without a wok?

A 12-inch cast iron skillet works if it's your largest pan. Heat it for 3-4 minutes until oil smokes. The flat bottom means food in the center cooks faster than edges, so keep everything moving constantly. You'll need to work in smaller batches, about 12 ounces maximum compared to 16 ounces in a wok.

What oil should I use?

Peanut oil handles 450°F before smoking, making it ideal for stir-frying. Vegetable oil works too with a 428°F smoke point. Avoid olive oil, which smokes at 375°F and turns bitter. Use 2-3 tablespoons oil per pound of ingredients. The oil should shimmer and lightly smoke before adding food.

How do I get restaurant-style smoky flavor?

That flavor, called wok hei, requires 500°F+ temperatures and a seasoned wok. Home stoves rarely exceed 450°F even on high heat. Get close by using maximum heat, cooking in 8-ounce batches, and letting oil smoke for 5 seconds before adding aromatics. A carbon steel wok develops better seasoning than nonstick after 20-30 uses.