Ground Beef Korean Bulgogi Bowl Warm Satisfying Real Flavor Made Simple
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Ground Beef Korean Bulgogi Bowl Warm Satisfying Real Flavor Made Simple
Healthy Comfort Food

Ground Beef Korean Bulgogi Bowl Warm Satisfying Real Flavor Made Simple

🌸Mother's Day — let the crockpot cook while you celebrate
Yesica Andrews

Yesica Andrews — Slow Cooker Enthusiast & Busy Mom

Yesica is a mom of three who lives and breathes the slow cooker life. Every recipe she shares has been tested on her famously picky family — if they approve, it makes the cut.

Mom of 3 Picky-Family Tested Set & Forget Pro Crockpot Specialist

Sticky, savory, just a little sweet that sauce is everything. Ground Beef Korean Bulgogi Bowl brings those big, bold flavors to your table fast, with simple pantry ingredients you probably already have.

I started making this back in early spring when weeknights felt exhausting and I had zero energy for anything complicated this was my easy reset. The kind of dinner that comes together in under 30 minutes but tastes like you actually tried. After testing it a handful of times, I landed on toasting the sesame seeds right in the pan before adding the beef tiny step, real difference in flavor depth.

Ground Beef Korean Bulgogi Bowl recipe, served and ready to eat, easy homemade dish
Yesica Andrews

Ground Beef Korean Bulgogi Bowl Warm Satisfying Real Flavor Made Simple

This Ground Beef Korean Bulgogi Bowl offers a warm and satisfying meal bursting with authentic Korean flavors made simple. Perfect for an easy dinner or weeknight dinner, this family-friendly recipe features a delicious bulgogi sauce recipe that brings a genuine Korean ground beef bowl experience to your table.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Total Time 25 minutes
Servings: 5 servings
Calories: 543

Ingredients
  

  • 500g / 1 lb beef mince (ground beef) any fat % you like
  • 1 tbsp canola oil or any other plain flavoured oil
  • 2 tsp canola oil (to wilt baby spinach)
  • 1 tbsp onion finely grated (~1/4 onion)
  • 3 tbsp red apple finely grated (skin on is fine, ~1/2 apple)
  • 3 garlic cloves finely grated
  • 1 tsp ginger finely grated
  • 2 1/2 tbsp soy sauce all-purpose or light
  • 1 tbsp sesame oil
  • 1 tbsp mirin (omit for no alcohol)
  • 1 tbsp brown sugar
  • 1/8 tsp black pepper
  • 2 tbsp soy sauce all-purpose or light (for rice bowl drizzle sauce)
  • 1 tbsp sesame oil (for rice bowl drizzle sauce)
  • 2 tsp brown sugar (for rice bowl drizzle sauce)
  • 2 tsp rice vinegar or apple cider vinegar (for rice bowl drizzle sauce)
  • white rice (medium or short grain, if you can)
  • 4 large handfuls baby spinach or similar chopped leafy greens (cabbage, kale)
  • 1 large carrot peeled and julienned or grated using box grater
  • 1 avocado mashed
  • 1/4 cup pickled ginger (pink for colour)
  • 1 1/2 cups baby cos or romaine lettuce torn into bite size pieces
  • 1 tsp white sesame seeds
  • 1 green onion finely sliced

Notes

  • 1. Apple and onion should be finely grated to maximize flavor with a microplane or box grater. The apple delivers natural sweetness and tenderizes the meat, while the grated onion adds a unique depth of flavor.
  • 2. For gluten-free options, substitute soy sauce with tamari. Avoid dark soy sauce or kecap manis as they are too strong and overpower the dish.
  • 3. Mirin can be replaced with Chinese cooking wine or cooking sake plus 1/2 tsp brown sugar, or omitted entirely for a non-alcoholic version. It adds flavor to compensate for not using expensive steaks.
  • Leftover cooked beef keeps well refrigerated for up to 3 days or can be frozen for up to 3 months. Reheat with a splash of water to maintain moisture.
Ground Beef Korean Bulgogi Bowl recipe, served and ready to eat, easy homemade dish

Why You’ll Love This Bowl

Here’s the honest truth this is the kind of dinner I make when it’s been a long day and I still want something that feels real. Low effort, minimal cleanup, and it doesn’t feel heavy perfect for spring nights when you’re easing back into a routine.

What Goes Into the Bulgogi Sauce

The sauce is what separates this Ground Beef Korean Bulgogi Bowl from any basic soy-and-garlic situation. Two ingredients make it worth your attention: grated apple and grated onion.

The apple adds a natural sweetness that brown sugar alone can never replicate, and the grated onion builds depth in a way diced onion simply won’t. After testing this sauce several times, those two steps are non-negotiable Yesica would say skip them and you’ve made a different recipe entirely.

Pro Tip: Use a box grater if that’s what you have. It works just fine for both the apple and the onion.

Key Ingredients at a Glance

Everything here is straightforward and easy to find at Walmart or Aldi no special trip required.

How to Make It

The whole process moves fast, so have your sauces mixed before you turn on the stove.

  1. Mix the bulgogi sauce in one bowl and the rice bowl drizzle sauce in a separate bowl. Set both aside.
  2. Heat 2 teaspoons of canola oil in a large non-stick pan over high heat. Wilt the baby spinach in two batches using tongs, about 1 minute total. Remove and set aside.
  3. Add 1 tablespoon of oil to the same pan. Add the ground beef and break it up as it cooks until no pink remains.
  4. Pour in the bulgogi sauce and let it simmer rapidly, stirring occasionally, until the sauce mostly evaporates and the beef picks up some caramelization still moist, never dry.
  5. Assemble your bowls: beef over white rice, wilted spinach, julienned carrot, mashed avocado, pickled ginger, and torn romaine. Finish with sesame seeds and sliced green onion. Drizzle the bowl sauce over everything before mixing it all together.

Can You Make This Ground Beef Korean Bulgogi Bowl Ahead of Time?

Yes and it reheats beautifully. The cooked beef keeps well and is honestly one of the better meal-prep proteins for bowls like this.

Easy Swaps Worth Knowing

The bowl toppings are flexible by design use what you have and what your family will actually eat.

FAQs ( Ground Beef Korean Bulgogi Bowl )

Can I use ground turkey instead of beef?

Yes, ground turkey works fine with the same bulgogi sauce. The recipe notes any fat percentage of beef mince is acceptable, so a comparable approach applies to turkey.

What is bulgogi sauce made of?

The sauce uses grated apple, grated onion, garlic, ginger, soy sauce, sesame oil, mirin, brown sugar, and black pepper. The apple and onion are essential – do not skip them.

What do you serve with this Korean ground beef dish?

This meal works over white rice, noodles, or in rice wraps, burritos, or tacos. Bowl toppings include spinach, julienned carrot, mashed avocado, pickled ginger, and lettuce.

Can I make this ahead for meal prep?

Yes, the cooked beef keeps for 3 days in the fridge or 3 months in the freezer. Add a splash of water when reheating if needed to restore moisture.

Is this recipe spicy?

No, this dish is not spicy as written. The bulgogi sauce contains no chili or heat-based ingredients, making it family-friendly straight from the recipe.

Ground Beef Korean Bulgogi Bowl recipe, served and ready to eat, easy homemade dish

This Korean Bulgogi Bowl Belongs in Your Weekly Rotation

A Ground Beef Korean Bulgogi Bowl this flavorful in under 30 minutes still feels like a small miracle on a Tuesday night that caramelized, savory-sweet beef over fluffy rice is the kind of dinner that earns a “wait, you made this?” every single time.

A few things worth knowing before you start: don’t skip grating the apple into the bulgogi sauce it brings a quieter sweetness than brown sugar alone, and you’ll notice the difference. If you’re prepping ahead, the beef keeps in the fridge for three days and freezes beautifully just add a small splash of water when you reheat it. And if rice isn’t your thing tonight, the beef tucks into lettuce wraps just as happily.

If you made this, I’d love to hear how it landed at your table did you pile on the pickled ginger or keep it simple? Drop a comment below, share a photo, or pass this one along to a friend who needs an easy dinner in her back pocket. Here’s to dinners that help you get back into a rhythm.

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