Pepper Steak in a Crock Pot

Category: Dinner Recipes

Slow cooker pepper steak lands on the plate with tender strips of beef, soft peppers that still hold their shape, and a glossy soy-ginger sauce that clings to every bite. It’s the kind of dinner that tastes like it took more work than it did, especially once the sauce thickens at the end and soaks into a mound of white rice.

The part that makes this version work is the order: the steak goes in first, the vegetables sit on top, and the sauce gets stirred in without fuss. Flank steak needs long, gentle heat to relax, and the cornstarch slurry goes in only after the beef has cooked through, so the sauce turns silky instead of turning pasty early on. The balance of soy sauce, brown sugar, rice vinegar, and ginger gives you that familiar Chinese-American takeout flavor without needing a separate pan.

Below, I’ve added the small details that matter most: how thin to slice the steak, when the peppers stay best, and what to do if you want a little more heat or a gluten-free version.

The steak came out tender instead of stringy, and the sauce thickened up just enough to coat the rice without drowning it. I added the cornstarch at the end like you said and it turned out glossy, not gummy.

★★★★★— Melissa R.

Love this slow cooker pepper steak with glossy soy-ginger sauce? Save it for the nights when you want tender beef and rice-bowl comfort with almost no hands-on time.

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The Part That Keeps the Beef Tender Instead of Chewy

Flank steak is lean, which is why it needs the slow cooker’s gentle heat instead of a hard sear and fast finish. Slice it thinly against the grain so the fibers are shorter before cooking starts; that matters more here than in a skillet recipe because the meat stays in the pot for hours. If you cut with the grain, the finished steak can still taste stringy even when it looks tender.

The other thing people get wrong is heat. High heat will cook the beef faster, but it can tighten the slices before the collagen has time to relax. Low and slow gives you better texture, and the final 15 minutes with the cornstarch slurry are what turn the juices into a sauce that actually coats the steak and peppers instead of pooling at the bottom.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dish

Pepper Steak in a Crock Pot glossy savory
  • Flank steak — This cut holds its shape and soaks up the sauce well, but only if it’s sliced thin against the grain. If you want a cheaper swap, skirt steak works the same way, though it can cook a little faster and turn softer at the edges.
  • Soy sauce — This gives the dish its deep salty backbone. Use regular soy sauce for the fullest flavor; low-sodium works if that’s what you keep on hand, but don’t skip the brown sugar or the sauce will taste flat.
  • Beef broth — It adds body and keeps the sauce from tasting one-note. Water works in a pinch, but you lose that savory depth that makes the finished bowl feel complete.
  • Rice vinegar — This keeps the sauce bright enough to balance the sugar and soy. If you don’t have it, apple cider vinegar is the closest substitute, but use a touch less because it reads sharper.
  • Cornstarch slurry — This is what gives you that glossy takeout-style finish. Stir it in only at the end; if it cooks the full time, the sauce can get dull and a little gummy instead of silky.

Building the Sauce So It Turns Glossy, Not Watery

Layer the Beef and Vegetables First

Place the sliced steak in the bottom of the slow cooker, then pile the peppers, onion, and garlic on top. That order keeps the vegetables from sinking into the sauce and turning mushy too early, while the beef underneath stays in contact with the liquid and softens properly. The garlic should sit close to the sauce, not on the lid, so its flavor actually carries through the pot.

Whisk the Sauce Before It Goes In

Mix the soy sauce, broth, brown sugar, vinegar, and ginger until the sugar dissolves as much as it can. You’re looking for a uniform, dark liquid with no grainy bits on the bottom. If the sugar stays clumped, the sauce can taste uneven, and the first bite will be saltier than the last.

Finish With the Slurry at the End

Once the steak is tender, whisk cornstarch and cold water together until smooth, stir it into the slow cooker, and switch to high for about 15 minutes. The sauce should thicken enough to lightly cling to the spoon and coat the beef. If you add cornstarch too early, it loses thickening power over a long cook and you end up with thin gravy instead of that glossy finish.

Three Ways to Adjust This Slow Cooker Pepper Steak

Make it gluten-free

Use tamari or a certified gluten-free soy sauce in place of regular soy sauce. The flavor stays close to the original, and the sauce still thickens the same way because the cornstarch is doing the work there. Serve it with rice as written and nothing else in the method needs to change.

Make it a little sweeter or sharper

Add another teaspoon of brown sugar if you want a more takeout-style sauce, or an extra teaspoon of rice vinegar if you want more brightness. Change one direction at a time, because too much of both can make the sauce taste muddled instead of balanced.

Use a different cut of beef

Sirloin or skirt steak both work if you slice them thin and keep an eye on texture near the end of the cook. Sirloin stays a little firmer, while skirt gets softer and more shredded if it sits too long. If you use a tougher cut, low heat is the better choice.

Add heat without changing the method

Stir in crushed red pepper flakes or a little sliced fresh chili with the garlic. That gives the dish a light burn that works with the ginger and soy instead of overpowering them. Don’t add hot sauce at the end unless you want the sauce to taste sharper and less rounded.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The peppers soften a bit more as it sits, but the flavor gets deeper.
  • Freezer: It freezes well for up to 2 months. Cool it fully first and freeze the beef and sauce together; the peppers will soften after thawing, but the dish still works.
  • Reheating: Warm it gently on the stove over medium-low or in the microwave in short bursts, stirring once or twice. If the sauce looks too thick after chilling, add a splash of broth or water instead of blasting it with high heat.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I cook pepper steak on high in the slow cooker?+

Yes, but low gives you the best texture with flank steak. High works in a shorter window if you’re in a rush, but the meat can tighten up sooner, so start checking it early. The goal is tender slices, not falling-apart beef.

Can I use a different cut of beef for this recipe?+

Yes. Sirloin, skirt steak, or even thinly sliced chuck can work if you keep the slices thin. Leaner cuts stay more distinct, while chuck will soften more and take on a stew-like texture after the long cook.

How do I keep the peppers from turning mushy?+

Slice them a little thicker than you would for stir-fry, and don’t overcook the dish past the point where the beef is tender. They soften as they sit in the sauce, so the final 15 minutes is enough time for the cornstarch to thicken without turning the vegetables to mush.

Can I make this ahead of time?+

You can slice the beef and prep the vegetables a day ahead, then mix the sauce and keep it separate until cooking. I wouldn’t cook the full dish too far ahead if you want the peppers to keep their shape. It reheats well, but the fresh-from-the-slow-cooker texture is better.

How do I fix a sauce that stayed too thin?+

Add another small slurry of cornstarch and cold water, then cook on high for a few more minutes. The slurry needs heat to activate, so don’t just stir cornstarch straight into the pot or it can clump. If the sauce is still loose, the slow cooker probably needed a little more time uncovered at the end.

Pepper Steak in a Crock Pot

Pepper steak in a crock pot with tender thin-sliced flank steak and crisp-tender bell peppers in a glossy soy-ginger sauce. Slow-cooked until steak is fork-tender, then thickened with a quick cornstarch slurry for a rich coating over white rice.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 5 minutes
Total Time 5 hours 20 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Chinese-American
Calories: 690

Ingredients
  

Pepper steak base
  • 2 lb flank steak Thinly sliced against the grain.
  • 1 red bell pepper Sliced.
  • 1 green bell pepper Sliced.
  • 1 yellow bell pepper Sliced.
  • 1 onion Sliced.
  • 4 garlic Minced.
  • 0.5 cup soy sauce
  • 0.25 cup beef broth
  • 2 tbsp brown sugar
  • 1 tbsp rice vinegar
  • 1 tbsp fresh ginger Grated.
  • 2 tbsp cornstarch
  • 2 tbsp cold water For the cornstarch slurry.
  • 1 cooked white rice for serving
  • 1 sesame seeds For garnish.
  • 1 green onions For garnish.

Equipment

  • 1 Dutch oven

Method
 

Slow-cook the steak and peppers
  1. Place the sliced flank steak in the slow cooker.
  2. Add the bell peppers, onion, and garlic on top of the steak.
  3. Whisk together the soy sauce, beef broth, brown sugar, rice vinegar, and fresh ginger, then pour the mixture over the steak and vegetables.
  4. Cook on low for 5–6 hours or on high for 2.5–3 hours until the steak is tender.
Thicken the sauce and serve
  1. Whisk the cornstarch and cold water together, then stir the slurry into the slow cooker.
  2. Cook on high for 15 minutes until the sauce thickens and coats the steak.
  3. Serve the pepper steak over white rice, then garnish with sesame seeds and green onions.

Notes

For best texture, slice the flank steak thinly against the grain so it stays tender during the long cook. Refrigerate leftovers in a sealed container for up to 3 days; reheat gently until steaming. Freeze the pepper steak (sauce and meat) for up to 2 months, but garnish with fresh sesame seeds and green onions after reheating. For a lower-sugar option, reduce the brown sugar to 1 tablespoon (add 1 extra tablespoon beef broth if the sauce tastes too sharp).

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