✍️ By Grace Moser⏱ 15 min total🍽 Serves 4🔥 High Heat
A full steakhouse experience in your kitchen — done in 15 minutes — and everyone at the table goes absolutely quiet for a second before saying “wait, you made this?”
That’s what garlic butter steak bites do. They sound almost too simple to be impressive. But the second those little cubes hit a screaming hot pan, your kitchen smells like somewhere you’d actually pay to eat at.
Golden crust. Juicy center. Drowned in garlicky, herby brown butter. And here’s the thing most people miss: the secret to that perfect sear has nothing to do with the steak itself. (Scroll to Pro Tip #1 — it’ll change how you cook everything.)
“I’ve made these for random Tuesdays, last-minute dinner parties, and meal prep — and they have never once let me down.”
15Min Total
5Min Prep
10Min Cook
420Cal / Serving
38gProtein
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Fun Fact
A proper sear happens at around 300°F+ on the surface of the meat. Most home cooks never get their pan hot enough — which is why they get gray, steamed steak instead of that golden-brown crust restaurants are known for.
What You’ll Need
For the Steak Bites
- Sirloin steak, 1-inch cubes1.5 lbs
- Kosher salt1 tsp
- Black pepper½ tsp
- Garlic powder½ tsp
- Smoked paprika½ tsp
- Olive oil1 tbsp
For the Garlic Butter Sauce
- Unsalted butter4 tbsp
- Garlic cloves, minced6 cloves
- Fresh parsley, chopped1 tbsp
- Fresh thyme leaves1 tsp
- Red pepper flakes½ tsp
- Salt and pepperto taste
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Best steak for this recipe?
Sirloin is the go-to — affordable, flavorful, handles high heat well. Ribeye makes these extra rich (definitely worth it for a special occasion). Skip round or chuck steak — they’re too tough for this method.
Tools You’ll Need

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Cast iron skillet
Sharp chef’s knife
Cutting board
Tongs
Paper towels
Small mixing bowl
Garlic press or microplane
Instant-read thermometer
Measuring spoons
⚠️
No cast iron? Here’s what to do.
A heavy-bottomed stainless steel pan works. Non-stick pans aren’t designed for the high heat needed for a proper sear — you won’t get that crust and the coating can degrade at extreme temps.
Pro Tips
These are the things I genuinely wish someone had told me the first time I made these.
1
Dry your steak — completely.
Pat every cube bone-dry with paper towels before seasoning. Moisture = steam = gray, sad steak instead of a crust. This single step makes the biggest difference of anything on this list.
2
Preheat your pan like you mean it.
Let the cast iron sit on high heat for 2-3 minutes before anything goes in. Flick a drop of water — it should evaporate instantly. If it doesn’t, wait longer.
3
Cook in batches. Always.
Cramming all the steak in at once drops the pan temperature and you end up steaming instead of searing. Two batches, space between each piece — it’s worth the extra two minutes.
4
Wait for the butter to foam.
When you add butter and garlic, let it melt and foam before tossing the steak back in. That foam is doing real work — carrying all the flavor and coating every single bite.
5
Pull them earlier than you think.
Small pieces carry over. Aim for 130°F for medium-rare — they’ll hit 135°F from residual heat. Overcooked steak bites are chewy and dry. You want them juicy all the way through.
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How to Make Garlic Butter Steak Bites

1
Prep and dry the steak.
Cut your steak into roughly 1-inch cubes — uniform size means they cook evenly. Pat every single piece completely dry with paper towels. Not damp. Dry. Set aside.
2
Season generously.
Mix salt, pepper, garlic powder, and smoked paprika in a small bowl. Toss the steak cubes in the seasoning until every side is coated. Let sit for 5 minutes while the pan heats up.
3
Get the pan screaming hot.
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Put your cast iron on high heat for 2-3 minutes. Add olive oil and swirl to coat. The oil should shimmer almost immediately — that’s your green light.
4
Sear in two batches.
Add steak in a single layer with space between each piece. Don’t touch for 60-90 seconds — that crust needs time to form. Flip once with tongs, sear another 60 seconds. Remove to a plate. Repeat with batch two.
5
Make the garlic butter.
Reduce heat to medium. Add butter — let it melt and foam. Add minced garlic, stir constantly for 30-45 seconds until fragrant. Watch it closely. Burned garlic is bitter and will throw off the whole dish.
6
Finish and toss.
Add red pepper flakes and thyme. Return all steak bites to the pan, toss to coat in that butter sauce. 30 more seconds — just to heat through. Off the heat immediately.
7
Garnish and serve right now.
Top with fresh parsley. Eat them hot. Like, immediately. These are at peak deliciousness straight from the pan.
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Doneness temperature guide
Rare: 120-125°F | Medium-rare: 130-135°F | Medium: 140-145°F | Well done: 160°F+
Substitutions and Variations
| Ingredient | Swap | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Sirloin | Ribeye, NY strip, tenderloin | Ribeye = richest flavor; tenderloin = most tender |
| Unsalted butter | Ghee or vegan butter | Ghee adds a nuttier depth; Miyoko’s for dairy-free |
| Fresh thyme | Fresh rosemary or chives | Rosemary is more intense — use half the amount |
| Smoked paprika | Regular paprika + pinch of cumin | Not quite the same but works in a pinch |
| Red pepper flakes | Pinch of cayenne | Cayenne is hotter — start with less |
| Olive oil | Avocado oil | Higher smoke point — actually slightly better for this |
Fun Variations Worth Trying
Throw sliced mushrooms into the pan right before the butter — they soak up every drop of that garlic sauce and become something else entirely. A splash of Worcestershire sauce in the butter takes these into full steakhouse territory.
Make Ahead Tips
| What | How Far Ahead | How to Store |
|---|---|---|
| Season steak cubes | Up to 24 hours | Uncovered plate in the fridge — air-dries the surface for an even better sear |
| Mince garlic + chop herbs | Up to 2 days | Small airtight containers in the fridge |
| Garlic butter sauce | Make fresh only | Garlic turns sharp and bitter as it sits — don’t make this ahead |
| Full recipe | Up to 3 days | Fridge in airtight container; reheat in hot skillet |
Nutrition Breakdown
Per Serving (serves 4) Approximate values — exact amounts will vary by steak cut and exact portion size
420Calories
38gProtein
28gFat
2gCarbs
0gSugar
480mgSodium
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Diet-Friendly Notes
Keto and low-carb: perfect as-is. Dairy-free: swap butter for ghee or vegan butter. Whole30: use ghee and skip the pepper flakes. Paleo: already compliant with olive oil and ghee.
What to Serve With These
Garlic mashed potatoesRoasted asparagusArugula + lemon saladCreamy polentaCrusty sourdoughRoasted broccoliniCauliflower mashSteamed rice
Leftovers and Storage
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Fridge
Airtight container — up to 3 days
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Freezer
Up to 2 months — thaw overnight in fridge
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Reheat
Hot skillet, 1-2 min. Microwave works but can toughen them
Creative Ways to Use Leftovers
- Chop and add to a steak and egg scramble the next morning
- Toss over rice with soy sauce and fresh scallions
- Build a steak salad with blue cheese, cherry tomatoes, and balsamic
- Stuff into a warm tortilla with avocado and hot sauce
- Add to pasta with a little of that leftover butter sauce
Frequently Asked Questions
Q
What’s the best cut of steak for steak bites?
Sirloin is the most reliable — good flavor, affordable, handles high heat well. Ribeye is richer and more tender. New York strip also works beautifully. Avoid tough cuts like flank, round, or chuck for this cooking method.
Q
Do I really need a cast iron skillet?
It’s the best tool for this. Cast iron holds heat like nothing else, which is how you get that restaurant-quality crust. A heavy stainless steel pan is a decent second choice. Non-stick pans aren’t built for this level of heat.
Q
How do I know when they’re cooked?
An instant-read thermometer is the most reliable method. For medium-rare, pull at 130°F — they’ll carry over to 135°F. Visually, you want a deep brown crust and just a hint of pink when you cut one open.
Q
Can I make these without butter?
Yes — olive oil or avocado oil work, though you’ll lose that rich, creamy finish that makes the sauce so good. Ghee is a solid middle-ground if you want dairy-free but still want that buttery depth.
Q
Can I use garlic powder instead of fresh garlic for the sauce?
Fresh garlic is where the magic lives in this recipe. Garlic powder gives you background flavor — fresh garlic gives you those little golden bits in the butter that are genuinely the best thing in the entire dish. Use fresh whenever you can.
Q
Are these good for meal prep?
Really good, actually. Double the recipe and store in the fridge for up to 3 days. They’re excellent added to bowls, wraps, salads, or eggs throughout the week. High protein, low carb — they pull their weight.
Wrapping Up
Garlic butter steak bites make you feel like a genuinely capable cook — even if you’ve never made steak at home before.
The process is fast. The ingredients are probably already in your kitchen. And the result is so much better than it has any right to be for a 15-minute dinner.
Make these once and you’ll understand why people keep circling back to this recipe. It’s one of those meals that quietly becomes a regular — not because you planned it that way, just because it’s that good.
Go make them. Then come back and drop a comment below — I want to know what you paired them with, if you made any swaps, and whether your family let you get even one bite before they disappeared. Questions always welcome too!