Garlic Butter Steak Bites Recipe with Just 3 Ingredients in 20 Minutes

Garlic Butter Steak Bites: The Practical Short Answer
Garlic butter steak bites are small steak cubes seared quickly in a hot pan, then tossed with butter and garlic while the meat is still juicy. They are useful when you want steak for dinner without cooking a full steak, setting up the grill, or waiting on a long marinade.
The best version is simple: cut the steak evenly, dry it well, sear in a single layer, and add garlic butter near the end so the garlic does not burn. Sirloin steak bites are the most practical everyday choice, but ribeye, New York strip, tenderloin tips, or steak tips can also work.
What Are Garlic Butter Steak Bites?
Garlic butter steak bites are bite-size pieces of steak cooked quickly instead of as one large steak. The smaller shape gives you more browned edges, faster cooking, and an easier way to serve steak with rice, potatoes, vegetables, pasta, salad, or bread.
The tradeoff is that steak cubes can overcook faster than a whole steak. That is why the pan needs to be hot, the meat needs space, and the garlic butter should go in late. If the butter and garlic sit in a ripping-hot pan too early, the garlic can turn sharp and bitter before the steak is done.
For a broader steak doneness reference, this beef cooking temperature guide can help with pull temperatures and doneness planning.
Best Steak for Garlic Butter Steak Bites
The best steak for garlic butter steak bites depends on your budget and texture preference. Sirloin is usually the most balanced option because it has enough beef flavor for quick searing without the price of tenderloin. If you want richer steak cubes, ribeye or New York strip will bring more fat and a softer bite.
Lean, flavorful, and practical for a fast steak for dinner. Cut it into even cubes and avoid overcooking.
More marbling means a softer, buttery bite, but the pieces can release more fat in the skillet.
Good for steak cubes when you want a clean beef flavor and a slightly firmer texture.
Very tender and quick-cooking, but usually more expensive and milder in flavor.
If you are comparing steak cuts before buying, this guide to rib eye steak vs striploin gives a useful side-by-side view of two popular steak options.
Price and Where to Buy Steak for Bites
Steak bites do not require the most expensive steak in the case. Sirloin, steak tips, and trimmed steak cubes are often more sensible than premium ribeye or filet when the final dish is cut small and coated in garlic butter. Prices vary widely by country, region, grade, breed, butcher, store, fresh or frozen status, and whether you buy locally or online.
Look for steak that is evenly cut, not sitting in excess liquid, and not loaded with thick exterior fat that will need heavy trimming. If the butcher sells steak tips or sirloin steak bites, those can save prep time. If not, buy a whole sirloin steak and cube it yourself.
| Region | Where to Look | What to Buy | Useful Links |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | Butcher shops, supermarkets, warehouse clubs, ranch-direct sellers, and online meat retailers | Sirloin steak, steak tips, top sirloin, strip steak, or tenderloin tips | Porter Road steak tips, Snake River Farms top sirloin |
| Canada | Local butchers, premium supermarkets, specialty meat shops, and Canadian online meat sellers | Ask for sirloin steak, grilling steak, steak tips, or a cut that can be cubed for quick searing | Check current local butcher availability before planning the recipe. |
| Australia | Butchers, supermarkets, steak specialists, and online beef suppliers | Look for sirloin, porterhouse-style steak, rump steak, or trimmed steak pieces depending on local labeling | Confirm the cut name and thickness because steak labels vary by market. |
For the skillet, a heavy pan helps the steak cubes brown quickly. A cast iron skillet is useful, but a heavy stainless steel pan can also work well.
How to Cook Steak Bites Without Drying Them Out
The cooking method is simple, but the timing matters. Small steak cubes have a lot of surface area, which is good for browning but risky for overcooking. Keep the pieces in a single layer, work in batches if needed, and add the garlic butter only after the steak has already developed color.
| Method | Best Use | Approximate Time | Key Tip |
|---|---|---|---|
| Skillet steak bites | Best flavor and browning | About 8 to 10 minutes cooking time | Dry the steak cubes and avoid crowding the pan. |
| Steak bites in air fryer | Fast hands-off cooking | Start checking around 6 minutes | Toss with garlic butter after air frying so the garlic stays clean. |
| Griddle steak bites | Large batches | Depends on heat and cube size | Spread the cubes out and keep the garlic butter away from the hottest zone. |
| Thin sliced steak recipes | When the steak is already sliced thin | Very fast | Sear quickly and reduce the butter-garlic time to avoid toughness. |
If you prefer grilling steak before cutting it into pieces, this guide to how long to cook steak on the grill can help with timing before slicing and serving.
Can You Make Steak Bites in an Air Fryer?
Yes, but the air fryer version behaves differently from the skillet version. The air fryer gives you speed and convenience, while the skillet usually gives deeper browning and better garlic butter control.
For steak bites in air fryer, cut the steak into even pieces, arrange them in a single layer, and cook at high heat until they are close to your preferred doneness. Toss the hot steak bites with melted butter and fresh garlic after cooking. This keeps the garlic from scorching in the basket and gives the steak cubes a cleaner butter finish.
The exact timing depends on cube size, steak thickness, basket style, and how full the basket is. Start checking early and use a thermometer rather than relying only on color.
Video: Garlic Butter Steak Bites Reference
Use this video as a visual reference for the general idea of quick garlic butter steak bites. The method below keeps the article recipe focused on three main ingredients and a simple skillet approach.
Recipe Block: Garlic Butter Steak Bites
A simple 3-ingredient master method for fast steak cubes with browned edges and a garlic butter finish.

Best for: sirloin steak bites, steak tips, or any tender steak cut that can be cubed evenly. Use salted butter for the cleanest three-ingredient version.
Ingredients
Sirloin steak cubes
1½ lb
est. $18.00
Salted butter
4 tbsp
est. $0.80
Fresh garlic
4 cloves
est. $0.60Ingredient prices are rough estimates for planning only. Actual cost changes by store, steak cut, region, package size, and current availability. If you use unsalted butter, add salt to taste.
Step-by-Step: How to Make Garlic Butter Steak Bites
These steps are written for the skillet method because it gives the strongest browning and the most control over the garlic butter.

Image 1: Cut, Dry, Heat, and Sear
1Cut even cubes
Cut the steak into 1-inch cubes. Even steak cubes cook more predictably than mixed large and small pieces.
2Dry the surface
Pat the cubes dry with paper towels. A dry surface browns faster and helps avoid gray, steamed steak.
3Heat the pan
Heat a heavy skillet over medium-high heat. The pan should be hot before the steak goes in.
4Sear in a layer
Add steak cubes in a single layer. Let the first side brown before turning, and cook in batches if needed.

Image 2: Butter, Garlic, Temperature, and Serve
5Lower the heat
Reduce the heat once the steak has color. This protects the butter and garlic from burning.
6Add garlic butter
Add the butter and garlic. Toss the steak cubes just until the garlic smells fragrant and the butter coats the meat.
7Check doneness
Check the thickest cube with a thermometer. Use 145°F with a 3-minute rest as the official USDA safe reference.
8Rest and serve
Rest briefly, spoon the garlic butter over the steak bites, and serve while the edges are still hot.
Expert Tips for Better Steak Cubes
- Dry the steak first: moisture on the surface slows browning.
- Do not crowd the skillet: crowded steak cubes release steam and cook unevenly.
- Add garlic late: fresh garlic burns faster than steak browns.
- Use salted butter for the 3-ingredient version: it keeps the ingredient list short while giving the steak enough seasoning.
- Cut against the grain when possible: if your steak has a clear grain direction, cube it so the finished bites are easier to chew.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Wet steak cubes steam first, which makes it harder to get the browned edges that make steak bites taste like steak.
If the pan is crowded, split the recipe into batches. Browning is more important than saving one minute.
Garlic can go bitter if it sits in a very hot skillet for too long. Add it after the steak has browned.
Stew meat and collagen-heavy cuts need longer cooking. They are not ideal for quick garlic butter steak bites.
What to Serve with Garlic Butter Steak Bites
Garlic butter steak bites are flexible because they already bring fat, beef flavor, and a strong garlic finish. For a complete steak for dinner plate, pair them with something that can catch the butter.
- Mashed potatoes, roasted potatoes, or crispy smashed potatoes
- Rice bowls with vegetables and pan juices
- Buttered noodles or quick pasta
- Green beans, asparagus, broccoli, or a simple salad
- Toasted bread for scooping up the garlic butter
For more dinner planning ideas, see these steak sides.
Storage and Reheating
Store leftover steak bites in an airtight container in the refrigerator. The USDA FSIS guidance for leftovers is 3 to 4 days in the refrigerator, and quality is best when the steak is reheated gently rather than blasted over high heat. USDA leftovers and food safety.
To reheat, warm the steak bites in a skillet over low to medium-low heat with a small spoonful of butter or water. Stop as soon as they are hot. Microwave reheating works, but it can make small steak pieces tougher if you heat them too long.
Nutrition Estimate
This estimate is based on 1 1/2 pounds of raw top sirloin steak, 4 tablespoons of salted butter, and 4 garlic cloves divided into 4 servings. Exact nutrition changes with the steak cut, trimming, butter brand, and serving size.
Nutrition values are approximate and should be adjusted if you use ribeye, tenderloin, unsalted butter, or a different serving size.
FAQs About Garlic Butter Steak Bites
Sirloin is one of the most practical choices because it has good beef flavor, cooks quickly, and is usually more affordable than ribeye or tenderloin. Ribeye, New York strip, tenderloin tips, and steak tips can also work.
Yes. Air fryer steak bites work best when the steak cubes are evenly cut, spaced in a single layer, and checked early with a thermometer. Toss them with garlic butter after cooking so the garlic does not burn.
Use a tender steak cut, dry the cubes well, avoid overcrowding the pan, sear quickly, and do not keep cooking after the steak reaches your target doneness.
This version uses three main ingredients: steak, salted butter, and garlic. If you use unsalted butter, you may want to add salt as a pantry seasoning.
Cooked steak bites are best stored in an airtight container in the refrigerator and used within 3 to 4 days. Reheat gently so the small steak pieces do not dry out.










