Homemade beef chow fun features thick, chewy noodles, tender juicy steak, and crisp veggies brought together with a fragrant brown sauce. Cook these restaurant-style fried noodles in your home kitchen with ease using my recipe! {Gluten-Free Adaptable}
Beef chow fun is a classic and popular Cantonese dish that everyone loves. The dish combines wide rice noodles (ho fun) with beef slices and vegetables stir fried with aromatics and a brown sauce. It might be a dish that you often order from a Chinese restaurant. But did you know that it’s quite easy to make it in your own kitchen as long as you can gather the right ingredients?
Beef chow fun ingredients
What type of rice noodles to use?
The type of rice noodles you use makes the biggest impact on beef chow fun.
Fresh rice noodles
The best type of rice noodles are the fresh rice noodles and it’s the type we always use in China. They are fat, chewy noodles made with rice flour and water. Sometimes they are sold in large sheets, and sometimes cut into noodles. You can find them in Chinatown, Chinese markets, and Thai markets. The noodles are usually in a plastic bag and sold with other fresh ingredients (not refrigerated).
It’s the best type of noodle to use, if you can find them, because they yield the best texture.
Dried Chinese ho fun
Sha he fen (沙河粉), also known as ho fun or sha hor fun, are wide, flat rice noodles that originate from the town of Shahe in Guangzhou, China. These noodles are a staple in Cantonese cuisine and are known for their smooth, slightly chewy texture.
My favorite type of dried ho fun is the one from the Mala Market. Once cooked, it has a thin, light and smooth texture, and it absorbs sauce very well.
Dried Thai or Vietnamese rice noodles
The other more commonly seen rice noodles are the Thai or Vietnam type. Both Taste of Thai and Three Ladies have the wide type that is great for beef chow fun.
Compared to the Chinese sha ho fun, the Thai and Vietnamese type rice noodles are thicker and chewier. You might prefer this texture depending on your personal taste, but I think the Chinese style works slightly better in this dish.
A word on beef chow fun sauce ingredients
There are many ways to put together the beef chow fun sauce. I’ve seen many recipes that use oyster sauce. But my Cantonese chef friend told me that they only use soy sauce, for a cleaner, more refreshing taste.
My beef chow fun only contains four ingredients:
- Chicken broth
- Light soy sauce (for umami)
- Dark soy sauce (for the light caramel flavor and the dark brown color)
- Sugar
If you use plenty of fresh aromatics (like in this recipe) and some good rice noodles, you only need this simple sauce for a very flavorful noodle dish that is full of umami.
Mise en place
Since cooking beef chow fun requires you to move quickly, you want to have everything prepared prior to the stir fry:
- Sliced and marinated beef
- Mixed sauce
- Sliced aromatics (onion, green onion white part, ginger, and garlic)
- Bean sprouts
- Prepared rice noodles
- Sesame oil
Note, I grouped some ingredients together because you will add them at the same point in the stir fry. It makes the workflow easier, plus you’ll have fewer plates to wash.
How to cook beef chow fun
Prepare the rice noodles
Dried rice noodles
If using dried rice noodles, you will need to pre-soak or cook them prior to the stir fry. You should always follow the package instructions, but soak or cook the noodles a little shorter for an al dente texture. This way, the noodles won’t fall apart easily during the stir frying and will keep a nice, chewy texture.
Fresh rice noodles
If using fresh noodles, you will need to cut the rice noodle sheets into wide noodles. After cutting, use your fingers to separate the noodles so they don’t stick together.
NOTE: Do not use water to rinse the noodles. It might make the separation process easier, but this step makes the noodles soggy and prone to falling apart during the stir fry.
You should also avoid storing the fresh noodles in the fridge, which makes them rigid and hard to separate later.
Make the stir fry
Making beef chow fun is quite easy once you have all the ingredients ready:
- Sear the beef and transfer it to a plate
- Cook the aromatics
- Toss the noodles
- Add back the beef
- Pour in the sauce and toss everything together
- Stir fry with the bean sprouts
- Add the green part of the green onion
- Final toss
Once done, you will have a plate of super fragrant noodles that taste just like the ones you find in Chinese restaurants. The noodles will be chewy and full of flavor, the beef juicy and tender, and the vegetables crunchy and crispy.
Cookware for making beef chow fun
You don’t need a wok
If you look at any authentic beef chow fun recipe, it always calls for a wok and a gas range. However, this setup might not be practical for every home cook, especially when you have an electric stove, or a gas stove that is not super powerful. Read more on why I do not recommend a wok for beginners, and how to choose between a wok and a skillet for your stir fry station.
If you follow my recipe, you can achieve great results with a large nonstick skillet.
Prepare a large skillet with a pair of tongs
If possible, pick a heavy nonstick skillet for your beef chow fun and every other stir fry you cook. We are not using a wok here, but high heat is still a crucial factor to creating a great dish. The reason we need a large skillet is that it will heat up faster on an average range due to its large contact surface. And a heavier pan always holds heat better, so the pan temperature won’t drop the second you add in the sauce; such a drop would cause all your ingredients to be steamed instead of seared.
A pair of tongs (or cooking chopsticks) is a must-have for tossing noodles, so you don’t end up splashing half of the ingredients onto your kitchen counter.
How to make the perfect beef chow fun
(1) How to create juicy tender beef with a perfectly seared surface
First, always cut against the grain. It is OK to slice the beef thinly, such as 1/8-inch thick pieces. Or you can cut it into 1/4-inch thick strips. Your call.
Second, always marinate the beef and use some cornstarch in your marinade. Not only will it make your beef extra flavorful, but it will also tenderize the meat and protect it from overcooking. It’s an “ancient” Chinese cooking hack that I use even when searing meat for pasta and other Western dishes.
If you follow these two steps, you can choose almost any cut of the steak and still produce great results. However, my favorite choice is always flank and skirt steak, which are cheaper in price, yet well-marbled.
(2) Use a generous amount of oil
Do not skimp on the oil when making beef chow fun. If you order this dish in a restaurant, sometimes you even see oil pooling on the bottom of the dish. The homemade version uses less oil than the restaurant, but you still need enough to properly cook the noodles. The oil not only prevents the noodles from sticking and falling apart, it also infuses the great flavor from all the aromatics to make the noodles tastier.
You also need to use more oil if you do not use a nonstick pan, because rice noodles tend to stick to the pan.
(3) When it comes to fried noodles, less is more
Just like with pizza toppings, using fewer ingredients will yield better results because the ingredients won’t crowd your pan and transform the noodles into a stew.
(4) How to replace ingredients
Beef chow fun is a very versatile dish and you can tweak it with other ingredients you have at home. In fact, I’ve asked my Cantonese friends about this dish and everyone has their own version.
Feel free to add some vegetables such as gai lan (Chinese broccoli) or bok choy. You can skip the bean sprouts and use a bit more white onion for texture. As a rule of thumb, you want to use some crisp, crunchy veggies to enhance the texture of the dish.
Want to learn more about stir fry?
Check out my most popular posts below:
- 7 Best Chinese Stir Fry Sauce Recipes
- Scallion Beef Stir Fry (葱爆牛肉)
- Chinese Eggplant with Garlic Sauce
- General Tso Tofu (Crispy Tofu without Deep Frying)
- Sweet and Sour Chicken (Without Deep-Frying)
Beef Chow Fun (干炒牛河)
Ingredients
Marinade
- 1/2 lb (225 g) beef flank steak
- 1 tablespoon light soy sauce
- 1 tablespoon Shaoxing wine
- 2 teaspoons cornstarch
Sauce
- 2 tablespoons chicken broth
- 1 1/2 tablespoons light soy sauce
- 1 1/2 tablespoons dark soy sauce
- 1 teaspoon sugar
Stir fry
- 7 oz (200 g) dried rice noodles (or 12 oz / 360 g fresh thick rice noodles)
- 3 tablespoons peanut oil (or vegetable oil)
- 1 thumb ginger , julienned
- 3 cloves garlic , sliced
- 1/4 white onion , sliced
- 4 loosely packed cups (4 oz / 120 g) bean sprouts
- 4 green onions , sliced to 2” (5 cm) pieces, white halved, white and green separated
- 2 teaspoons sesame oil
Instructions
- Slice beef against the grain into 1/8” (3mm) thick and 2” (5 cm) long pieces, and transfer the pieces to a small bowl. Add the light soy sauce, Shaoxing wine. Use your hand to gently mix the beef until the sauce is fully absorbed. Add the cornstarch and mix again until evenly distributed. Let marinate for 15 minutes while preparing the rest of the ingredients.
- Combine all the sauce ingredients. Mix well and set aside.
- If using dried noodles: Cook (or soak) the rice noodles according to the instructions minus 1 minute, until cooked through, but still a bit chewy inside. Rinse rice noodles with cold water and drain. To avoid sticky rice noodles during stir fry, add 1 teaspoon sesame oil to the drained noodles. Gently toss noodles by hand to separate and evenly coat them with a thin layer of oil.
- If using fresh noodles: slice the rice noodle sheet into noodles, then separate the noodles with your hands. Do not soak the noodles in water.
- Heat 1 tablespoon of oil in a large nonstick skillet over high heat until hot. Spread the beef slices in the skillet in a single layer. Cook until the bottom side of the beef turns golden brown, 1 to 2 minutes. Flip the beef and cook the other side until browned, but the inside is still a bit pink, 30 seconds to 1 minute. Transfer beef to a plate immediately.
- In the same skillet, add the remaining 2 tablespoons of oil and turn to medium heat. Add the ginger, garlic, white onion, and the white part of the green onion. Stir and cook until the aromatics turn light golden on the edges, 1 minute or so.
- Toss the cooked noodles again to separate gently, and add them into the skillet. Use a pair of tongs to toss the noodles with the rest of the ingredients to coat well with the oil.
- Add the beef back into the skillet. Pour in the mixed sauce. Immediately use a pair of tongs or chopsticks to toss and mix everything.
- Add the bean sprouts. Keep tossing gently (to avoid breaking apart the noodles) until the bean sprouts just start to soften, 1 to 2 minutes. Then add the green onion. Toss a few more times, until the sauce is absorbed by the noodles, and the veggies are softened but still crunchy. Turn off heat and transfer everything to serving plates immediately. Serve hot as a main dish.
Nutrition
Recipe update notes
This recipe was published back in 2017 and I updated it in 2024. I’ve made it countless times over the years, trying to perfect the recipe. In the latest version, I eliminated the broccolini and increased the amount of bean sprouts, to give the dish a more authentic presentation. For the sauce, chicken broth is used in place of Shaoxing wine for a more balanced taste. The ratio of light and dark soy sauce was slightly adjusted for the perfect dark brown color (Total is still 3 tablespoons. Depending on the dark soy brand you use, you might still want to use 2 tablespoons light and 1 tablespoon dark.)
Beef Chow Fun is one of my favorite dishes to order out! It’s so good, and of course I was oblivious to how tricky it might be to cook. 🙂 Once again you make authentic cuisine accessible to the masses. Thank you for sharing your expertise! I always learn something when I stop by your blog!
Thanks Meggan! Yes, beef chow fun is quite difficult to cook at home and I failed so many times! I’m glad my own experience is helpful 🙂
I really enjoyed your YouTube video too! Random unrelated question… what is the song that you have playing in the background? If you are allowed to disclose, and want to. I only ask because my toddler was totally jamming out to it while we watched you cook. 🙂 How do you find music like that for your videos? So professional!
Maggie!!! OH MY GAWD! I am making beef chow fun today because my friend posted a photo on Facebook and made me hungry!! 😛 love the video. . I also have a ceramic knife! this looks sooooo good!!! Beef Chow Fun is one of my fave Chinese food dishes. love learning about how chefs prepare it in restaurant kitchens! Cool fact! love this!
Love using my ceramic knife! It’s so sharp and could cut vegetables easily and without smash them.
Glad you like this one. I can never cook like the chef in Chinese restaurant… Really need a lot of workouts until I can hold wok by one hand 😛
Beef chow fun is my husband’s favorite Chinese dish! I love it too! But I never try making it at home. For some reason, I found this dish intimidating. Thank you for all those clear tips. I know I have to try this very soon!
This dish is indeed intimidating! Rice noodles are quite delicate and it’s so easy to overcook or under-cook them. Restaurant chef uses great amount of oil to make the noodles tasty and not sticky, but I really don’t want that much oil in homemade dish. Let me know if you tried it out!
I loved your video. How helpful. I don’t consider myself ignorant of Chinese (or Asian) cooking, I know I have so much more to learn. I will be checking out your youtube channel. Thank you so much!!!!
Hi Michelle, I’m glad you like my video! It’s a new thing I started to try out a few months ago, and I often doubt about whether it’s useful. If it could help you with Chinese cooking, even just a bit help, I will feel the time was well spent! 🙂
We LOVE beef chow fun and yours looks absolutely mouthwatering, Maggie! Every time I make it at home I always feel like it is never quite the same as what we get in the restaurant – I guess because we don’t have a gas oven hehe. Thanks so much for the great tips – yours looks perfect and definitely restaurant quality so I’m so excited to try it 🙂
I totally agree that home cooking chow fun is always different from the one in the restaurant. The gas oven they use is ridiculously huge and you have no idea how much oil they pour on the noodles. I don’t feel like to use too much oil in the dish, so I’m afraid the noodles are still not as moist as in the restaurant. Let me know how it goes if you tried it out! 🙂
Oh yeah – this is one of our all-time favorite dishes (we like it dry like this or the kind with sauce). You did an amazing job getting that authentic char on the meat and it just looks so appetizing. Thanks for the excellent tips!
Thanks Monica! If you marinate the beef with soy sauce before cooking, you could get the char easily during stir fry.
Have a great weekend 🙂
This looks better than takeout! I’ve never ordered Beef Chow Fun but it looks like something I would love!! Pinned!
Thanks for sharing Michelle! For this dish, the freshly cooked one will taste better. So I’d suggest to try it out at a restaurant instead of ordering takeout. But no matter either way, hope you’ll enjoy it! 🙂
This dish and the video look so good.
So well done! 🙂
Thanks Aysegul! Have a week ahead! 🙂
Look so good! It’s a busy Monday for us, and this would be a perfect meal. I should stop by an Asian market to buy the chinese broccoli so I can make this! Love the tutorial video too! Very easy to follow. 🙂
Thanks Nami! The noodles stir-fry is a great choice for a busy week day’s dinner. Hope you enjoy the cooking 🙂
Can this dish be made Whole Plant Based Style?
Pretty sure it’s possible. For example, use tofu to replace the beef and use vegetarian oyster sauce. I’ll try to develop this recipe and keep you updated.
Life saver! I did this tonight. Didn’t take much time and was able to get food on table in time. I used broccolini since I cannot get Chinese broccoli. But it tasted great. The bitterness that bothered me with a different recipe didn’t register. Thank you for the recipe!
You’re the most welcome and glad to hear the dish turns out great! I love using broccolini in my stir fried noodles too. Fried noodles is one of my favorite ways to get dinner onto the table. So fast and delicious 🙂
Great great recipe! One thing though,I don’t know where you live but where I live flank and skirt steak are some of the most expensive cuts you can buy, what else would work?
Thanks; Charlie
Hi Charles, wow, I didn’t know that flank and skirt steak can be super expensive. In general, any well-marbled beef is more suitable for stir-fries, because it generates tenderer meat. Could you find cheaper tri tip or sirloin? If not, just try with any cut that is not for braising. As long as you slice against the grain and marinate the beef, even some lean cut can generate pretty decent result.
Hi and thanks for all these wonderful suggestions. The one thing I really want to do with the fun is to get the wonderful charred smokey and crunchy flavor (you mention this, I forget the term — it is the wok flavor that comes from the wok itself) . My favorite Chinese restaurant for this was Hong Min’s (closed) in Chicago. The chef was masterful! We would always get a layer of beautifully crunchy noodles at the bottom of the plate. For that pleasure, I don’t care how much oil! But it was never greasy, just very flavorful, brown and crispy. Do you ever recommend cookware? I want to buy a heavy non stick skillet that will hold heat and begin to experiment with this dish. I do not want anything with a toxic coating. I too have an electric range, the bane of my existence!
Thanks for this post, you have a new follower!
I absolutely love beef chow fun! I followed the recipe, and found the beef tasty and the sauce was good. However, I feel like the addition of ginger completely ruined it when I added everything together. I had even doubled the beef, sauce and noodles to make a larger batch, but left the ginger amount the same. It was still too much. I found that ginger was not an ingredient in many other chow fun recipes I perused after my failed dish. If I try this recipe again, I’m going to omit the ginger altogether.
Thanks Maggie! I like all of your recipes . I like home made sauce the most.
Thanks again and Happy New Year!!!
Thanks so much for leaving a comment and I’m glad to hear you like recipes! Happy New Year 2018! 🙂
What kind of rice noodles did you use? I love how wide they are!
Hi Carrisa, I’m afraid I don’t have a brand name right now. Usually I just go to an Asian market and pick the widest rice noodle I can find. They usually turn out pretty well 🙂
Hi. Just discovered your blog via my wife and I love it! I tried printing the Bef Chow Fun with Chinese Broccoli recipe but it said the page was not found.
Also, since we are allergic to corn, we use arrow root to thicken sauces. Do you know if arrow root has the same tenderizing effect on meat?
Thank you!!
Hi Craig, thanks so much for letting me know that the recipe print button is not working. I just asked my tech support to look into it and hopefully I can fix it.
As for the sauce thicken agent, I’m pretty sure that arrowroot works. Happy cooking and hope your dish turns out great!
I’ve always used cornstarch on my beef before stir frying, but never actually knew why! I’m glad I know now 🙂 I’m lucky enough to have a wok and a good gas stove, but have been known to crowd my pan! I really have to work on that. I love that you list out what ingredients to have ready on the counter before cooking. Makes it so easy to keep organized. Oh yeah, and of course the recipe sounds delicious! Chow fun is just sooooo good.
Hi there, I made this last night, and it turned out great! Will be using this recipe again.
Looked at other versions, and I liked yours best because: a) I alternate between wok and non-wok due to travel and being in different kitchens, b) I loved the thoughtful planning and explanation of why and wherefore regarding ingredients and equipment, c) it had everything I was looking for. I don’t use the ginger, though.
It’s authentic also. It replicates what I have in restaurants, and it taught me I can do it myself. TY! 😀
Hi-
can’t wait to try another one of your recipes (your egg foo young recipe really elevated our dish!) Do you think this will work with shiratake noodles?
thanks!
mare