Cantonese Beef Stew is a dish that always popped in and out of my childhood. Sometimes it would be bubbling away in a clay pot at a Chinatown restaurant, and sometimes it was scooped out of a big pot at home. The tender, gelatinous pieces of beef and melt-in-your-mouth chunks of radish in a thin gravy, served over rice? Total comfort food. This Instant Pot Braised Beef with Radish is my shortcut pressure cooker version, with a few tweaks and improvements from the original Cantonese braised beef recipe we posted back in the early days of the blog.
Cantonese Comfort Food
My dad’s family is Cantonese, and my mom’s side of the family is from Shanghai. While my sister and I grew up eating dishes from both cuisines, my mom once asked us…if we had to choose, which would we rather have? A table filled with Shanghainese classics like braised pork belly, soup dumplings (xiao long bao), drunken chicken, and scallion oil noodles? Or a table of Cantonese classics like Salt and Pepper Pork Chops, steamed whole fish, and this braised beef with radish?
While I have a special place in my heart reserved for xiao long bao, and my sister is obsessed with scallion oil noodles, we both sheepishly turned to each other and said, back-against-the-wall, we’d choose the Cantonese table.
There’s just something particularly homey and comforting about Cantonese food, especially saucy things over rice, like this Instant Pot Braised Beef with Radish. There’s just nothing better.
Rough Flank: A Tough Cut of Meat!
Now that I’m officially an Instant Pot convert, I decided to create a pressure cooker Cantonese braised beef with radish recipe. Like my Instant Pot Curry Beef recipe, this recipe uses a cut of beef called rough flank (niu nan in Mandarin, or ngau lam in Cantonese).
It’s a pretty tough cut of meat, full of tendony, sinewy, and gristly bits that when cooked for hours, all work together to produce a delicious texture. We cut them into pretty big, 2 1/2 inch chunks, as you can see below, because they’ll shrink when cooked.
The Instant Pot helps tenderize that tough cut of meat in much less time, which is key when you’re looking for a comfort food dinner and may not have 4-6 hours to make it.
Cantonese Instant Pot Braised Beef with Radish: The Recipe
Fill your wok with cold water, and add the beef. Place over high heat, bring to a boil, and cook the beef for 1 minute to remove any impurities (see all that foam and scum in the photo below? That’s the stuff you don’t want in your stew!)
Use a slotted spoon to remove the beef to a colander, and rinse. Set aside.
Heat 2 tablespoons vegetable oil in your Instant Pot on the saute setting. Add the fresh ginger slices, and cook for 2-3 minutes, until fragrant and slightly crisped at the edges.
Add the blanched beef, Shaoxing wine, light soy sauce, dark soy sauce, oyster sauce, 3 star anise, 5 cloves, 3 bay leaves, and 1 tablespoon sugar.
Seal the Instant Pot, make sure the valve is set to “sealing,” and turn on the meat/stew for 45 minutes. The float valve on the top of the Instant Pot will raise when under pressure.
Once finished, allow the Instant Pot to release pressure naturally. Once the Instant Pot is safe to open (pressure is fully released when the float valve has dropped back into the lid), open it up. Here’s what the stew will look like at this stage:
Next, add the radish chunks.
Stir to combine with the beef.
Replace the lid, seal the Instant Pot, move the valve back to the sealing position, and put it back on manual high pressure for 10 minutes. Once done, allow the pressure to release again using Quick Pressure Release this time (be careful moving the valve, as the steam released will be very hot. Use an oven mitt!).
Open the pot when safe. Turn on the saute setting and bring the stew to a simmer. Mix together chicken stock or water and cornstarch into a slurry and stir into the stew to thicken. Simmer for 2 minutes, season with salt to taste, and stir in the scallions.
Serve your Instant Pot braised beef with rice!
Cantonese Instant Pot Braised Beef with Radish
Ingredients
- 3 to 3 ½ lbs beef rough flank (1.5 kg, cut into 2 1/2-inch pieces)
- 2 tablespoons vegetable oil (30 ml)
- 7 slices ginger
- 1 cup Shaoxing wine (240 ml)
- 3 tablespoons light soy sauce (45 ml)
- 1 tablespoon dark soy sauce (15 ml)
- 1 tablespoon oyster sauce (15 ml)
- 3 pieces star anise
- 5 cloves
- 3 bay leaves
- 1 tablespoon sugar (12g)
- 2 pounds daikon radish (1 kg, peeled and cut into 1-½ inch pieces)
- ¼ cup chicken stock or water (mixed with 2 teaspoons cornstarch)
- Salt (to taste)
- 2 scallions (cut on a diagonal into 1-inch pieces)
Instructions
- Fill your wok with cold water, and add the beef. Place over high heat, bring to a boil, and cook the beef for 1 minute to remove any impurities. Use a slotted spoon to remove the beef to a colander, and rinse. Set aside.
- Heat 2 tablespoons vegetable oil in your Instant Pot on the saute setting. Add the ginger slices, and cook for 2-3 minutes, until fragrant and slightly crisped at the edges.
- Add the blanched beef, Shaoxing wine, light soy sauce, dark soy sauce, oyster sauce, 3 star anise, 5 cloves, 3 bay leaves, and 1 tablespoon sugar.
- Seal the Instant Pot, make sure the valve is set to “sealing,” and turn on the meat/stew for 45 minutes. The float valve on the top of the Instant Pot will raise when under pressure.
- Once finished, allow the Instant Pot to release pressure naturally. Once the Instant Pot is safe to open (pressure is fully released when the float valve has dropped back into the lid), open it and add the radish chunks. Stir to combine with the beef.
- Replace the lid, seal the Instant Pot, move the valve back to the sealing position, and put it back on manual high pressure for 10 minutes. Once done, allow the pressure to release again using Quick Pressure Release this time (be careful moving the valve, as the steam released will be very hot. Use an oven mitt!).
- Open the pot when safe. Turn on the Saute setting and bring the stew to a simmer. Mix together chicken stock or water and cornstarch into a slurry and stir into the stew to thicken. Simmer for 2 minutes, season with salt to taste, and stir in the scallions.
- Serve with rice!
nutrition facts
Hi Sarah,
I look forward to making this recipe. However, I only got a 3 quartz pressure cooker and am concerned the daikon and beef flank may not fit in the pot. I am planning to reduce the recipe by half but was wondering if I should also reduce the time by half as well. Any help will be appreciated!
Sandy
Hi Sandy, the cooking time should be about the same, perhaps a 10 minutes less, but definitely not half the time!
Hi Sarah, I am a HUGE fan and follower of Woks of Life recipes. Coming from HK and living in London, you always cure my homesickness. I wanted to ask if I can use frozen beef flank for this? thanks x
Hi Chloe, yes, it’s fine to use previously frozen beef—just thaw completely before proceeding with the recipe! Thank you so much for your supportive words too! :)
Recipe is nice. The instruction is very clear and detail. The best write I have ever read.
Aw, thank you, Julia!
I followed the recipe and mau have added a stick of cinnamon. But it came out quite bitter, do you have any suggestions on fixing that next time I make it?
It could’ve been that the daikon wasn’t super fresh, which can sometimes result in bitterness. Look for super bright white radishes! Otherwise, could the spices have been burnt in any way before pressure cooking?
Thanks Sarah. Might’ve been the daikon. I was using a crackpot instead and didn’t fry the other ingredients so I don’t think it was that. I’ll look for fresher daikon!
Made this last night and it was soooo unctuous over hot rice Delicious! My mother used to make this but sadly I never got the recipe before she passed. The instant pot really makes this recipe approachable. I used beef brisket, added cooked tendons, and some chou hou paste. This recipe is a keeper!
Thank you, Christine! So glad you enjoyed it!
I made this for dinner and it tasted DELICIOUS. AMAZING!!!
Thank you Alvin! So happy to hear that!
I made this on New Year’s Day and it was a huge hit! It tasted just like the one we order from our favorite Chinese restaurant in town. I did not add salt anymore. It was perfect. I’ll definitely make this again :) Thanks for this recipe!
You’re very welcome, Arlene!
Can you recommend a non-alcoholic substitute for ShaoXing wine to use with this recipe? I’ve been Googling for ages but can’t find any answers!
Hi Alexandra, you can substitute beef or chicken stock!
I want to make this recipe but the farms where I purchase our meats don’t have beef rough flank listed. I will email to ask about it, but can I substitute flank steak or beef stew meat? I love your site. I’m convinced I was a Chinese grandma in a previous life ! 😁
Hi Maureen, the best substitutes would be brisket or beef chuck—well marbled chuck is best! Love that you’re channeling that Chinese grandma energy!
Excellent when made in an old-fashioned pressure cooker. As a Cantonese Chinese person living in the Rocky Mt West who misses her San Francisco, CA roots, this was just like the way I ate it as a child in Chinatown hot pots in the 1960s. There was no daikon at the store so I used turnips and rutabagas-delicious! I don’t remember beef brisket costing $8/lb. ever, but we can afford the occasional splurge. Thank you for your authentic recipes–my mom and grandmothers are smiling down from heaven.
You’re welcome, Grace! So glad we could help you get this taste of childhood. :) You’re right—meat prices are really so high these days! Another good reason to make it an occasional splurge and try to eat less meat, I think!