Blackstone Cowboy Stir Fry

Loading…

By Reading time

Blackstone Cowboy Stir Fry brings together crispy potatoes, browned smoked sausage, and charred peppers and onions in one loud, smoky skillet-on-steroids dinner. The best bites have a little of everything at once: crunchy edges on the potatoes, salty sausage, sweet peppers, and that griddle-kissed finish you just can’t get in a regular pan.

The trick is giving the potatoes enough time on the hot surface before anything else crowds them out. Once they start to pick up color, the sausage goes in to build even more browned flavor, and the vegetables hit the open griddle right at the end so they soften without turning watery. That’s what keeps this from tasting like steamed leftovers piled together.

Below, I’m walking through the order that matters on the Blackstone, the seasoning that gives this cowboy stir fry its smoky backbone, and a few smart swaps if you need to work with what’s in the fridge.

The potatoes got that perfect crisp edge on the griddle, and the sausage browned instead of just heating through. My husband kept sneaking bites straight off the Blackstone.

★★★★★— Karen M.

Love the smoky sausage, crispy potatoes, and charred peppers in this Blackstone Cowboy Stir Fry? Save it to Pinterest for your next griddle night.

Save to Pinterest

The Reason the Potatoes Go on the Griddle First

If the potatoes go in at the same time as the sausage and vegetables, they end up soft before they ever have a chance to brown. On a Blackstone, that’s the difference between a real cowboy stir fry and a pile of warm ingredients. The potatoes need direct contact with the hot surface and enough space for moisture to cook off, which is why the first 10 to 12 minutes matter most.

Cutting the potatoes into half-inch cubes keeps them small enough to cook through without burning the outside before the center turns tender. Russets work well here because they crisp up beautifully, but they also shed a little starch, which helps the edges take on that golden crust. Stir them only occasionally. If you keep moving them every minute, they never settle into the heat long enough to caramelize.

  • Russet potatoes — These crisp better than waxy potatoes and give you those browned edges that make the whole dish feel hearty. Yukon Golds can work if that’s what you have, but they’ll stay a little creamier and won’t get quite as crunchy.
  • Smoked sausage — Kielbasa gives a milder, rounder smoke, while Andouille brings heat and a little more spice. Pre-cooked sausage is the right choice here because you want browning, not a long simmer.
  • Smoked paprika — This adds a deeper grill-style flavor that tastes like the food picked up more smoke than it actually did. If you skip it, the stir fry still works, but it loses some of its cowboy edge.
  • Vegetable oil — Use a neutral oil with a high smoke point so the potatoes and sausage can brown without burning the seasoning. Olive oil can smoke too quickly on a hot flat top.

What Each Griddle Stage Is Doing for the Final Texture

blackstone-cowboy-stir-fry-recipe

Getting the Potatoes Golden

Heat the Blackstone to medium-high and spread the oiled potatoes in a single layer. You want to hear an immediate sizzle. That sound tells you the surface is hot enough to dry out the cut sides before they soften. Season them while they cook so the spices cling to the oil and toast into the crust instead of floating around in the pan.

Building Browned Sausage Flavor

Add the sliced smoked sausage after the potatoes have some color. It only needs 3 to 4 minutes to brown because it’s already cooked; what you’re after is caramelization on the cut edges. If the sausage looks pale and rubbery, the griddle isn’t hot enough. Let it sit longer before turning so the browning actually happens.

Softening the Peppers and Onions Without Steaming Them

Put the peppers, onion, and garlic on the open surface where there’s room to move them around. They should sizzle, not puddle. If they release a lot of liquid, the griddle is crowded or not hot enough, and they’ll start steaming instead of charring. Cook them until the onions are translucent with browned edges and the peppers have a little blistering.

Bringing Everything Together at the End

Once the vegetables are softened, toss everything together for the final 2 minutes. This is just long enough for the seasoning to coat every piece and for the flavors to marry without softening the potatoes you worked to crisp. Finish with parsley right before serving so the herbs stay bright against all that smoke and browning.

Make It Spicier with Andouille and Cayenne

Andouille plus the optional cayenne gives this stir fry more bite and a deeper Cajun-style finish. The potatoes and peppers can handle the heat, but the sausage becomes the lead note instead of just part of the mix.

Make It Dairy-Free and Gluten-Free Without Changing the Method

This recipe is naturally dairy-free and gluten-free as written, as long as your sausage is labeled gluten-free. That makes it one of those rare griddle dinners that works for a lot of people without any special substitutions.

Swap the Potatoes for Sweet Potatoes

Sweet potatoes bring a little more sweetness and soften faster, so they need a close eye on the griddle. Cut them a touch smaller than russets and give them the same head start so they still have time to brown before the sausage and vegetables go in.

Use What You Have in the Veg Drawer

Yellow peppers, poblano peppers, or even mushrooms can stand in for one of the bell peppers. Just keep the total volume similar so the griddle doesn’t get crowded, because crowding is what steals the char.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The potatoes soften a little, but the flavor stays solid.
  • Freezer: It freezes okay, though the potatoes lose some of their crisp texture after thawing. Freeze in a flat layer for up to 2 months if you want it for easy lunches.
  • Reheating: Warm it in a skillet or back on the griddle over medium heat so the potatoes can crisp up again. The microwave works in a pinch, but it softens everything and turns the sausage a little rubbery.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I use a different kind of potato?+

Yes. Yukon Golds work if you want a creamier center and slightly less crunch, and red potatoes hold their shape but won’t crisp quite as much as russets. If you swap, keep the cubes small and give them the full head start on the griddle.

How do I keep the potatoes from sticking to the Blackstone?+

Use enough oil to coat the surface, then leave the potatoes alone long enough to form a crust. If you try to move them too early, they’ll cling to the griddle, but once that first browned side sets, they release much more easily.

Can I make Blackstone Cowboy Stir Fry ahead of time?+

You can dice the vegetables and potatoes a day ahead, but I’d cook it right before serving if you want the best texture. The potatoes lose their crisp edge as they sit, and that browned griddle finish is a big part of what makes this dish work.

How do I know when the potatoes are done on the griddle?+

They should be golden on the outside and tender when pierced with a fork. If the outside is browning fast but the center is still firm, lower the heat slightly and keep cooking; the cubes are probably a little too large or the griddle is running too hot.

Can I use turkey sausage instead of smoked sausage?+

Yes, but turkey sausage won’t brown and render the same way, so the dish will taste a little leaner and less smoky. If you use it, add a little extra smoked paprika and watch the heat so it doesn’t dry out.

Blackstone Cowboy Stir Fry

Blackstone cowboy stir fry is a one-pan flat top dinner with caramelized smoked sausage rounds, golden diced potatoes, and charred peppers and onions. Sizzle everything on the griddle until the potatoes crisp and the vegetables soften with smoky browning.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 35 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Dinner
Cuisine: American
Calories: 520

Ingredients
  

Smoked sausage and potatoes
  • 1 lb smoked sausage (kielbasa or Andouille)
  • 3 russet potatoes dice into 1/2-inch cubes
Peppers, onions, and aromatics
  • 1 green bell pepper dice
  • 1 red bell pepper dice
  • 1 onion dice
  • 3 clove garlic minced
Seasonings and finishing
  • 2 tbsp vegetable oil
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • 1 tsp garlic powder
  • 0.5 tsp onion powder
  • 0.25 tsp cayenne (optional)
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • 1 fresh parsley for garnish

Equipment

  • 1 Blackstone griddle

Method
 

Cook the potatoes
  1. Preheat Blackstone to medium-high heat, then add 1 tbsp of the vegetable oil and spread potato cubes in a single layer. Cook 10-12 minutes, stirring occasionally, until golden and cooked through; season with smoked paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, salt, and pepper, then push to the side.
Brown the sausage
  1. Add the remaining vegetable oil to the griddle and cook sliced smoked sausage for 3-4 minutes, until caramelized and browned. Push the sausage next to the potatoes.
Char the peppers and finish
  1. Add peppers, onion, and minced garlic to the open surface and stir fry for 5-6 minutes until charred and softened. Combine everything together on the griddle and toss to mix, then cook 2 more minutes until everything is evenly hot and lightly caramelized.
  2. Garnish with fresh parsley and serve directly from the griddle while sizzling.

Notes

For best caramelization, avoid moving the potatoes too often during the first 10–12 minutes and keep the griddle at medium-high so steam cooks off fast. Store leftovers in an airtight container in the refrigerator up to 3 days; reheat in a skillet or on the griddle to re-crisp. Freezing is not recommended since potatoes soften after thawing. If you want a lower-sodium option, choose a reduced-sodium kielbasa or andouille and season with less salt.

You might also like these recipes

Leave a Comment

Recipe Rating