Easy Keto Beef Recipes My Family Asks For

Beef is the protein my family actually gets excited about, and on keto it needs no fixing: zero carbs, plenty of fat, and a different cut for every job.

Keto-Friendly 0gNet Carbs 218Calories 22gProtein 14gFat

Nutrition per 3 oz

68 keto beef recipes

Is beef keto?

Yes, beef is keto-friendly. Ground beef, steaks, and roasts all have 0g net carbs. Beef is one of the most complete protein and fat sources available on a ketogenic diet, with no carb counting required for plain, unprocessed cuts.

Beef shows up in my family's dinner rotation at least 3 nights a week. Ground beef on Mondays for a quick skillet meal. Chuck roast in the slow cooker on Sundays, which becomes two dinners and lunch the next day. Steaks on Friday when I want something worth sitting down for. Beef is the protein my family actually gets excited about, and on keto it works without modification: zero carbs, high fat, satisfying in a way that leaner proteins just are not by the end of a long day.

Why I always specify 80/20

80/20 ground beef is the number I always specify in my recipes for a reason. The 80 refers to lean meat, the 20 to fat. That 20 percent fat is doing serious flavor work. When you cook 90/10 or leaner ground beef in a dry pan, the meat browns but the flavor stays flat. Without fat to carry and distribute the flavor compounds, you end up with something that needs a sauce to be interesting. On keto, the carb-heavy thickeners and sugary sauces that conventionally fix lean ground beef are not options. 80/20 does not have that problem. It is flavorful on its own, it stays moist after draining, and it makes a better base for chili, taco meat, and burgers than anything leaner.

Chuck roast for the slow cooker

Chuck roast is the slow cooker cut, full stop. I have tried leaner stew meat, eye of round, and sirloin roasts in the slow cooker. They all come out dryer and less satisfying than chuck. The reason is connective tissue. Chuck roast has significant marbling and collagen-rich connective tissue that breaks down over a long braise into gelatin. That gelatin is what makes the braising liquid silky and the meat pull-apart tender. Leaner cuts lack the connective tissue, so they just dry out over 8 hours instead of getting richer. Season a chuck roast with salt, pepper, and garlic, add some beef broth and onion, and put it in the slow cooker on low for 8 hours. It is one of the best meals I make.

The reverse sear for thick steaks

The reverse sear is the steak method I use for any cut over an inch thick. Rest the steak on a wire rack in a 250-degree oven until the internal temperature reaches 115 to 120 degrees Fahrenheit. Then sear it in a cast iron pan over the highest heat you have for 60 to 90 seconds per side. The result is edge-to-edge even doneness with a proper crust, which is impossible to achieve with a hot-pan-only approach for thick cuts. Thinner steaks (under 3/4 inch) I sear conventionally: very hot pan, 2 minutes per side, rest 5 minutes.

Skip the pre-marinated cuts

The pitfall with beef at the grocery store is pre-seasoned and marinated cuts. The marinated skirt steak. The teriyaki-seasoned sirloin tips. The pre-rubbed short ribs. These are convenient, but the marinades often contain soy sauce with sugar, brown sugar-based rubs, or honey glazes. The carb count on these products can be 4 to 8g per serving, which is significant for a protein. Buy plain cuts and season them yourself. Salt and pepper is the correct answer for most beef preparations on keto.

Annie Lampella Written by Annie Lampella, Pharm.D., a pharmacist and recipe developer who has followed keto for 14 years.
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Common Questions About Keto Beef

Is beef keto?

Yes. All unprocessed beef cuts have 0g net carbs. Ground beef, steaks, roasts, ribs, and brisket are all keto-compatible. The fat content varies by cut: 80/20 ground beef has about 14g fat per 3 oz cooked, while leaner cuts like sirloin have closer to 5g fat per 3 oz. On keto, the fattier cuts like chuck, ribeye, and 80/20 ground beef are often preferable because the fat supports ketosis without requiring additional cooking fat. Plain and unseasoned is always safe; pre-marinated or sauced beef products need a label check for added sugar.

What ground beef is best for keto?

80/20 ground beef is the standard recommendation for keto cooking. The 20 percent fat content provides flavor, moisture, and the fat macros that matter on a ketogenic diet. Leaner ground beef (90/10 or 96/4) produces a drier result and may need added fat to compensate, which somewhat defeats the purpose of buying leaner meat. For recipes where you want a firmer texture (like meatballs), 85/15 is a good middle ground. For chili, burgers, and taco meat, 80/20 is the right choice.

Is steak keto?

Yes. Plain steak has zero net carbs and is one of the best protein sources on keto. All cuts qualify: ribeye, New York strip, filet mignon, sirloin, flank, skirt, and flat iron. The differences are in fat content and price, not carb count. Ribeye is the fattiest and most flavorful. Filet mignon is the leanest and most tender. The only steak to avoid on keto is pre-marinated or sauce-seasoned steak from the grocery meat case, which often contains sugar-based marinades.

How do I make keto ground beef recipes?

The most versatile approach is a simple seasoned ground beef base: brown 1 lb of 80/20 ground beef with diced onion, salt, pepper, and garlic. From there it becomes keto chili (add tomatoes and spices), keto taco meat (cumin, chili powder, oregano), keto hamburger helper (add cream, cheese, and broth), or a stuffed pepper filling. The best keto ground beef recipes on this site include keto chili, keto Hamburger Helper, keto stuffed peppers, and keto beef taco bowls.

Is beef jerky keto?

It depends on the brand. Many commercial beef jerky products are surprisingly high in carbs: 6 to 10g per serving is common due to sugar and soy sauce in the marinade. Some brands are formulated specifically for low-carb diets and come in at 0 to 3g net carbs per serving. Check the nutrition label carefully and look for jerky with 3g or fewer net carbs per serving. Avoid any product with "teriyaki," "sweet," "honey," or "peppered" in the name without checking the label, as these flavors almost always involve added sugar.

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