BBQ Chicken Pita Pizza: The 20-Minute Dinner That Never Misses

BBQ Chicken Pita Pizza: The 20-Minute Dinner That Never Misses

April 22, 2026

BBQ Steak Bites with Mutt's Sauce: The 15-Minute Dinner That Overdelivers

QUICK STATS
Prep: 5 min | Cook: 10 min | Total: 15 min | Servings: 2-4 | Difficulty: Easy | Cook method:
Stovetop skillet

There is a short list of meals that feel genuinely impressive while being almost embarrassingly
fast to make. Steak bites belong on that list. A hot skillet, five minutes of searing, and a pour of
Mutt's Sauce is the whole equation. Whatever else you serve alongside them is secondary.
The difference between steak bites that taste like a restaurant made them and steak bites that
taste like a rushed weeknight is almost entirely about two things: a screaming hot pan and the
right finishing sauce. Mutt's Sauce brings both the sweet smokiness and the depth that a plain
garlic butter skips. The sauce coats every piece, caramelizes slightly around the edges, and
turns a four-ingredient recipe into something people ask about. This is one of the fastest ways to put Mutt's Sauce to work on a protein that isn't chicken. It won't be the last time you make it.

Why This Works
Cutting steak into bite-sized pieces before cooking does something clever with the math.
Instead of one seared surface on each side of a whole steak, every cube has six sides available for browning. More surface area means more caramelization, more of that crust, more flavor in every forkful.
The butter-garlic base does the foundational work, then Mutt's Sauce comes in at the end when the heat is lower. That sequencing matters. Adding a sauce with any sweetness to a screaming hot pan too early burns it. Adding it in the last 60-90 seconds lets it coat the meat, thicken slightly, and develop without scorching. The result is a glossy, sticky finish that clings to every bite the way a good sauce should.

What You'll Need
Ingredients (serves 2-4)
• 1 to 1.5 lbs steak, cut into 1-inch bite-sized pieces (sirloin, ribeye, or New York strip all
work well)
• 2 tablespoons butter
• 1 clove garlic, minced (or 2 cloves if you want it bolder)
• 1/2 cup Mutt's Sauce, plus more for serving
• Salt and black pepper to season
Best cut for this recipe: Top sirloin is the go-to. It's flavorful, holds its shape well when cubed,
and doesn't dry out fast in a hot pan. Ribeye gives you more richness. Strip steak lands in
between. Any of the three will work. Avoid lean cuts like flank or skirt for this method — they
tighten up quickly at high heat and won't stay tender.

How to Make It
1. Pat your steak pieces dry with a paper towel before seasoning. This is the single most
important step. Surface moisture turns into steam in a hot pan, and steam prevents the
crust you're after. Dry meat browns. Wet meat boils.
2. Season generously with salt and black pepper on all sides. Let the pieces sit at room
temperature for 5 minutes while your pan heats up.
3. Heat a cast iron skillet or stainless steel pan over high heat until it's very hot — about 2
minutes. You want the pan to smoke slightly when a drop of butter hits it.
4. Add the butter and minced garlic to the pan. The garlic will sizzle immediately. Stir it for
about 30 seconds until fragrant — you're flavoring the butter, not browning the garlic.
Watch it: burnt garlic turns bitter fast.
5. Add the steak pieces in a single layer. Do not stir. Let them sear undisturbed for 2
minutes so a crust forms. Then turn each piece and sear the other side for 1-2 minutes.
Work in batches if needed — a crowded pan drops the temperature and steams instead
of sears.
6. Reduce heat to medium-low. Pour in the Mutt's Sauce and toss to coat every piece. Let it
cook for 60-90 seconds, turning the bites a few times, until the sauce thickens slightly
and clings. Done when the sauce is glossy and the steak is coated.
7. Serve immediately over rice, mashed potatoes, or your side of choice. Spoon any
remaining pan sauce over the top. Have extra Mutt's Sauce on the table.

 

Tips, Swaps, and Variations
Cast iron vs. stainless vs. non-stick
Cast iron or stainless steel only for this recipe. Non-stick pans can't handle the high heat you
need to develop a sear and will degrade at those temperatures. Cast iron holds heat the best
and gives you the deepest crust. Stainless is a close second and easier to clean.

Air fryer method
Season the steak bites and toss them with a light coat of oil. Air fry at 400 degrees for 6-8
minutes, shaking halfway. Then transfer to a skillet over medium heat, add butter and garlic,
pour in Mutt's Sauce, and toss for 60 seconds to glaze. The air fryer gets you the cook; the
skillet finish gets you the sauce coating.
Make it a full meal
• Serve over steamed white rice — the sauce soaks in and every bite of rice becomes part
of the dish
• Add roasted broccoli or asparagus on the same sheet pan while the steak cooks on the
stovetop
• Tuck into warm flour tortillas with sliced avocado for a BBQ steak taco that works for any
night of the week
• Serve as an appetizer with toothpicks — this recipe scales up easily and disappears fast
at a gathering

Make-ahead notes
The steak bites are best eaten immediately while the sauce is glossy and the sear is still crisp. If you need to prep ahead, season the cut steak and store it covered in the fridge for up to 24
hours. The cook takes 10 minutes from cold. Don't store already-cooked bites in sauce — they'll continue cooking as they sit and lose the texture.
Dial up the heat
Add a pinch of red pepper flakes to the butter with the garlic, or mix a teaspoon of your favorite
hot sauce into the Mutt's Sauce before adding it to the pan. The base sauce has enough
sweetness to balance heat well.

Built for the 4th and America 250 Celebrations
If you're building a cookout spread this summer and want something impressive that doesn't
require the grill, steak bites are the move. They cook indoors in 10 minutes, plate up beautifully
on a platter with toothpicks, and the Mutt's Sauce glaze makes them look and taste like you put
in real effort.

They also work as a starter while the main event is still on the grill. Make a double batch, set out extra Mutt's Sauce for dipping, and watch them go before the burgers are done.

The Sauce Behind the Recipe
Mutt's Sauce was built on a recipe that Charlynda Scales' grandfather carried with him. He was
a veteran. She is, too — a Lt. Colonel in the United States Air Force. When she launched the
brand more than a decade ago, she wasn't just selling a sauce. She was honoring a legacy and proving that a family recipe, made right, belongs on a national stage.

The relaunch you're ordering from right now is something different. A team of entrepreneurship
students at Meredith College — a women's college in Raleigh, NC — designed the strategy,
built the store, and ran the campaign. They treated it like a real client engagement, because it
was one. Charlynda gave them the keys and held them accountable to results. That's what real
experiential education looks like, and it's one of the things that makes this brand genuinely
worth supporting.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best cut of steak for steak bites?
Top sirloin is the most reliable choice — flavorful, affordable, and tender enough to stay juicy in
a hot pan. Ribeye gives you more richness and fat. New York strip is a good middle ground. For steak bites specifically, avoid lean cuts like flank or skirt, which tighten up quickly at high heat and can turn chewy.
Can I make steak bites in an air fryer?
Yes. Season and lightly oil the steak pieces, air fry at 400 degrees for 6-8 minutes shaking
halfway, then finish in a skillet with butter, garlic, and Mutt's Sauce for 60 seconds to glaze. The air fryer handles the cook; the skillet handles the sauce.
How do you keep steak bites from getting tough?
Two things: dry the meat before searing (surface moisture prevents a crust and leads to
steaming), and don't overcrowd the pan (crowding drops the temperature and steams the meat
instead of searing it). Work in batches if your pan isn't large enough to give every piece space.
How long does it take to cook steak bites?
About 10 minutes total — 2 minutes of prep, 2 minutes per side on high heat for the sear, then
60-90 seconds in the sauce to glaze. The whole recipe from cold pan to table is 15 minutes.

What do you serve with steak bites?

 

Steamed white rice is the classic pairing for this recipe since the sauce absorbs well. Mashed
potatoes, roasted broccoli, asparagus, and garlic bread all work. They also serve well as
appetizers with toothpicks and extra Mutt's Sauce on the side for dipping.
Can I use a different sauce instead of Mutt's Sauce?
Mutt's Sauce is specifically what makes this recipe work as written. The original recipe balances sweetness and smoke in a way that finishes a pan sauce without burning or turning bitter. A generic bottled sauce with high sugar content will scorch at these temperatures. If Mutt's Sauce isn't in your pantry yet, it should be — order at muttssauce.com.
Is Mutt's Sauce gluten-free or dairy-free?
Mutt's Sauce does not contain dairy ingredients, making it dairy-free as formulated. Review the
current label at muttssauce.com for the most accurate allergen information. The butter in this
recipe contains dairy — substitute with a dairy-free butter alternative if needed.

 

 

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