This gochujang ground beef bowl is quick, packed with flavor, and endlessly satisfying. Juicy, caramelized ground beef is tossed in a bold gochujang sauce with a hint of ginger, garlic, and chili, then spooned over warm rice and finished with sesame seeds and green onions. It comes together in under 30 minutes and tastes like something you'd order at a restaurant.

What Makes This Korean Ground Beef Bowl Special
The secret is in the sauce. Gochujang is a Korean fermented chili paste that brings a depth of flavor that's hard to replicate with anything else - it's smoky, slightly sweet, and has a complex, almost earthy heat that builds as you eat. Combined with soy sauce, ginger, brown sugar, and tomato paste cooked down with the aromatics, the result is a sauce that tastes like it took hours to develop. It didn't. Start to finish, this is a 20-minute protein-packed dinner.
Ingredients You Will Need
Ground beef:Â The base of the dish. Use an 80/20 blend - the fat content gives you better browning and more flavor. You can also use lean ground beef but the result won't be as juicy or rich.
Shallot:Â Adds a mild, slightly sweet aromatic base. Shallots cook down faster than onion, which makes them ideal for a quick weeknight dish like this.
Garlic:Â Two cloves, minced, stir-fried briefly until fragrant.Â
Red chili pepper:Â Adds a fresh, bright heat that complements the deeper spice of the gochujang. Slice it thin so it softens quickly in the pan. Remove the seeds if you prefer less heat.
Olive oil:Â For cooking the beef and aromatics.
Rice:Â The classic base for a ground beef bowl. Any white rice works well here. Jasmine rice is particularly good as its subtle floral aroma pairs beautifully with the bold sauce.
Sesame seeds and green onions:Â The finishing garnish. They add a nutty crunch and a fresh, mild bite that balances the richness of the beef.
Looking for more dinner recipes? Check out this easy-to-make Creamy udon noodles, this Crispy chicken sandwich , these delicious Chipotle chicken drumsticks or these Hot honey chicken wings.
For the Sauce
Gochujang:Â The star of the sauce. Gochujang is a Korean fermented chili paste with a deep, smoky, sweet, and spicy flavor that is unlike anything else. You can find it in most supermarkets in the Asian foods aisle or online. It's worth having a jar in the fridge. Once you start cooking with it, you'll want to put it on everything.
Tomato paste:Â Adds body, richness, and a subtle sweetness to the sauce. It gets cooked directly with the aromatics in the pan rather than added to the sauce mixture, which deepens its flavor and removes any raw tomato taste.
Vinegar:Â Cuts through the richness of the beef and the sweetness of the gochujang, giving the sauce a bright, balanced finish. Plain white vinegar or rice vinegar both work well.
Soy sauce:Â Adds a deep, savory saltiness and umami flavor that ties all the sauce ingredients together.
Grated ginger:Â Brings a warm, slightly spicy freshness that lifts the whole dish. Use fresh ginger rather than ground for the best result.
Brown sugar:Â Balances the heat and saltiness with a subtle sweetness and helps the sauce caramelize slightly as it simmers. Alternatively, you can use honey.

Cooking Tips
Cook the beef in two batches for better browning. This is the most important tip for this recipe. If you add all the beef to the pan at once, it steams rather than browns and you lose all that caramelized flavor. Cooking it in two batches gives each piece of beef proper contact with the hot pan and a much deeper, more flavorful crust.
Cook the tomato paste separately with the aromatics. Rather than adding the tomato paste directly to the sauce mixture, cooking it in the pan with the shallot, garlic, and chili for about 30 seconds before adding the sauce concentrates its flavor and removes any raw, sharp taste. It's a small step that makes a noticeable difference.
Don't rush the simmer. Once the sauce is in the pan, give it 2-3 minutes to reduce and thicken slightly. This is what transforms a collection of individual ingredients into a cohesive, glossy, restaurant-quality sauce.
Taste before adding salt. Gochujang and soy sauce are both quite salty, so always taste the finished dish before adding any extra salt. You may not need any at all.
Have your rice ready before you start the beef. The beef cooks so quickly that if your rice isn't ready, you'll be standing around waiting with a perfect pan of beef getting cold. Start the rice first and keep it warm while you cook everything else.
How to Make a Ground Beef Bowl
Make the sauce:Â Whisk together the gochujang, vinegar, soy sauce, ginger, and brown sugar in a small bowl. Set aside.
Brown the beef:Â Cook the ground beef in a hot skillet over medium-high heat, breaking it up as it cooks, until fully browned. Cook in two batches for better browning. Remove onto a plate.

Cook the aromatics:Â In the same skillet, cook the shallot and chilli until softened and lightly golden. Add the garlic and tomato paste and stir-fry for 30 seconds until fragrant.
Combine:Â Return the beef to the skillet and pour in the sauce. Stir well to coat everything evenly and simmer over medium heat for 2-3 minutes until the sauce thickens slightly.
Serve:Â Spoon over warm rice and garnish with sesame seeds and sliced green onions or cilantro. Serve immediately.
Serving Suggestions
The most classic way to serve this ground beef bowl is over steamed white rice with sesame seeds and green onions - simple, satisfying, and complete. But there are plenty of ways to build it out further. A sunny side up egg on top is an excellent addition, the runny yolk mixing into the sauce and rice in the most delicious way. Sliced cucumber or Asian cucumber salad, pickled red onion, or a simple kimchi on the side all add a refreshing contrast to the richness of the beef. For extra veggies, a handful of steamed edamame, sautéed bok choy or broccoli works really well alongside it.
Flavor Variations
Extra spicy:Â Double the red chili and add a teaspoon of gochugaru (Korean chili flakes) to the sauce for a deeper, more intense heat.
Milder version:Â Reduce the gochujang to 2 tablespoons. The dish will still have plenty of flavor - just a gentler kick.
With noodles:Â Swap the rice for cooked ramen or udon noodles and toss them directly in the pan with the beef and sauce for a noodle bowl version that is equally delicious.

Storing and Meal Prep Tips
This ground beef bowl is an excellent meal prep recipe. The leftovers keep well in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days and reheats beautifully on the stovetop or in the microwave.
To freeze, let the beef cool completely and freeze in an airtight container for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge and reheat gently on the stovetop, adding a small splash of water if the sauce has thickened too much.
Recipe
Gochujang ground beef bowl
Equipment
- Knife
- Mixing bowl
- Large (11-inch/28cm) skillet
- Zester
Ingredients
- 1 lb (500g) ground beef
- 1 shallot onion finely diced
- 2 clove garlic minced
- 1 red chili pepper sliced
- 2 tablespoon tomato paste
- Salt to taste
- Olive oil for cooking
- Sesame seeds and sliced green onions for serving
- Rice to serve with
For the sauce
- 4 tablespoon gochujang
- 2 tablespoon vinegar
- ¼ cup soy sauce
- 1 tablespoon grated ginger
- 1 tablespoon brown sugar
Instructions
- In a small bowl, whisk together the sauce ingredients. Set aside.
- Cook the rice according to package instructions and keep warm until ready to serve.
- Heat a drizzle of olive oil in a large skillet or wok over medium-high heat. Add the ground beef and break it up with a spatula. Season with salt and cook for 5-6 minutes, stirring occasionally, until fully browned with no pink remaining. If you want your beef to have good browning, cook it in two batches.
- Remove the beef onto a plate. Drizzle more oil onto the skillet if needed and add the shallot and chilli. Cook for 2-3 minutes until softened and lightly golden. Add the garlic and tomato paste and stir-fry for another 30 seconds until fragrant.
- Return the beef to the skillet and pour in the sauce. Stir well to coat everything evenly. Reduce the heat to medium and let it simmer for 2-3 minutes, allowing the sauce to thicken slightly and coat the meat.
- Spoon the beef over bowls of warm rice and garnish with sesame seeds and sliced green onions. Serve immediately.
Recipe video
Notes
This website, https://heretocook.com, offers nutritional information for recipes contained on this site. This information is provided as a courtesy and should not be construed as a guarantee. This information is a product of online calculators such as Cronometer.com and MyFitnesPal.com


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