Blackstone Egg Roll in a Bowl

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Ground pork, tender cabbage, and a fast soy-ginger sauce make this Blackstone Egg Roll in a Bowl taste like the filling from your favorite takeout egg roll, just without the wrapper. The best part is the texture: the pork browns on the hot griddle, the cabbage softens at the edges while keeping some crunch, and the sauce coats everything without turning it soggy.

This version works because the griddle gives you room to spread the ingredients out instead of steaming them in a crowded skillet. The pork gets real browning, the garlic and ginger hit the heat long enough to wake up, and the coleslaw mix stands in for all the chopping you’d normally have to do. A little rice vinegar keeps the bowl bright, and sesame oil adds the finish that makes the whole thing taste complete.

Below you’ll find the little timing details that matter most, plus a few swaps that keep the dish balanced if you want it lighter, spicier, or built around what you already have in the fridge.

The cabbage stayed crisp-tender and the sauce coated everything instead of pooling at the bottom. My husband went back for seconds before I even sat down.

★★★★★— Jenna M.

Save this Blackstone Egg Roll in a Bowl for the nights when you want that crispy-tender egg roll filling fast, with no wrapper and almost no cleanup.

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The Griddle Trick That Keeps the Cabbage Crisp Instead of Watery

The biggest mistake with egg roll in a bowl is crowding the pan. When the cabbage sits in its own steam too long, it goes limp and the pork loses its browned edges. On the Blackstone, you’ve got enough surface area to keep the mixture moving and let moisture cook off instead of pooling underneath.

The other part that matters is timing the cabbage. It goes in after the pork is already browned and the garlic and ginger have had a brief run on the heat. If you add it too early, it softens before the sauce has a chance to cling. Cook it just until the pale cabbage turns glossy and the edges lose their raw look, then pull the sauce through quickly so everything stays lively.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Bowl

Blackstone Egg Roll in a Bowl colorful pork cabbage
  • Ground pork — This gives the bowl its rich, savory base and browns beautifully on the griddle. If you swap in turkey or chicken, the dish gets leaner, but you’ll lose some of that egg-roll-style richness unless you add a touch more sesame oil at the end.
  • Coleslaw mix — This is the shortcut that makes the recipe practical. The shredded cabbage and carrot soften fast, and the mix gives you the right texture without knife work. Plain shredded cabbage works too, but it takes a minute or two longer to cook.
  • Soy sauce, rice vinegar, sesame oil, and sriracha — This is the balance point. Soy sauce brings salt and depth, vinegar keeps it bright, sesame oil adds the nutty finish, and sriracha gives just enough heat to keep each bite from tasting flat.
  • Garlic and ginger — Don’t bury them under the cabbage. They need a brief contact with the hot griddle to turn fragrant before the vegetables go in. If they sit too long, they can burn and turn bitter.
  • Green onions and sesame seeds — These finish the bowl with freshness and texture. Add them at the very end so they stay sharp and don’t disappear into the hot mixture.

Building the Bowl on the Griddle Without Overcooking Anything

Brown the Pork First

Heat the Blackstone to medium-high and spread the oil across the surface before adding the pork. Break it up with spatulas and let it sit long enough in spots to pick up color; if you keep stirring constantly, it turns gray instead of browned. You want small crisp edges and no pink remaining, which usually takes about 5 to 6 minutes.

Wake Up the Garlic and Ginger

Once the pork is cooked, add the garlic and ginger right onto the hot surface and stir them through for about a minute. They should smell fragrant almost immediately. If they start to brown hard, the griddle is too hot or the meat has been pushed aside too long, so work fast and keep them moving.

Cook the Cabbage Just to Crisp-Tender

Add the coleslaw mix and toss it through the pork. The cabbage should soften enough to lose its raw crunch but still keep some bite, and the carrots should stay bright. If the pan looks dry, don’t add water; the vegetables release enough moisture as they cook, and extra liquid will steam the whole dish.

Finish With the Sauce and Serve Right Away

Stir together the soy sauce, rice vinegar, sesame oil, and sriracha, then pour it over the hot mixture and toss for about 2 minutes. The sauce should coat the meat and cabbage in a thin sheen, not sit in a puddle. Finish with green onions and sesame seeds, then serve immediately while the cabbage still has texture.

How to Change It Up Without Losing the Point

Make It Lower-Carb and Extra Filling

This recipe is already naturally low carb, but you can push it further by using a little extra cabbage and skipping the carrots if you want a tighter carb count. The bowl still tastes complete because the pork, soy sauce, vinegar, and sesame oil carry the flavor.

Use Ground Turkey Instead of Pork

Ground turkey works well if you want a lighter bowl, but it needs a little help with richness. Keep the sesame oil in the sauce and don’t under-season the meat, or the finished dish can taste a little flat compared with the pork version.

Make It Gluten-Free

Swap the soy sauce for tamari or a certified gluten-free soy sauce. The flavor stays close to the original, and the rest of the recipe doesn’t need to change.

Dial Down the Heat

Leave out the sriracha or cut it in half if you want a milder bowl. You’ll still get plenty of savory, tangy flavor from the soy sauce and rice vinegar, just without the background heat.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The cabbage softens a little more as it sits, but the flavor holds up well.
  • Freezer: It freezes, but the cabbage loses some texture after thawing. If you plan to freeze it, undercook the vegetables slightly so they don’t turn mushy later.
  • Reheating: Reheat in a skillet over medium heat until hot, adding a splash of water only if the pan looks dry. The common mistake is microwaving it too long, which makes the cabbage limp and the pork rubbery.

The Questions People Ask Before They Make This on the Blackstone

Can I make Blackstone egg roll in a bowl ahead of time?+

Yes, and it reheats well. The texture is best if you stop cooking the cabbage when it’s still a little crisp, because it softens more after chilling and reheating. Store the sauce-coated mixture in the fridge and warm it in a skillet so it doesn’t turn watery.

How do I keep the cabbage from getting soggy?+

Cook it over medium-high heat and don’t pile it into one spot. The cabbage needs direct contact with the griddle so the moisture cooks off quickly. If you crowd it, it steams instead of browns and loses the texture that makes this dish work.

Can I use bagged coleslaw mix instead of shredding cabbage myself?+

Yes, that’s the fastest and easiest way to make it. Bagged coleslaw mix is designed for quick cooking, and the shredded cabbage and carrots soften at the right pace on the griddle. If the mix includes a lot of dressing or extra add-ins, skip it and use plain shredded cabbage instead.

How do I keep the pork from drying out?+

Don’t overcook it at the start. Brown the pork until it’s cooked through, then move straight to the garlic, ginger, and cabbage so it stays juicy under the sauce. If you leave it on the griddle too long after it’s done, it tightens up and loses the tender bite you want.

Can I make this less salty without losing flavor?+

Yes. Use a low-sodium soy sauce and keep the sesame oil and rice vinegar the same, because those ingredients carry a lot of the flavor balance. The vinegar keeps the bowl bright, so you don’t need to lean on extra salt to make it taste complete.

Blackstone Egg Roll in a Bowl

Blackstone egg roll in a bowl with griddle stir-fry flavor: browned ground pork, crisp-tender cabbage, and a glossy soy-ginger sauce. This deconstructed egg roll bowl comes together fast on a medium-high griddle for a low-carb, colorful meal.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Total Time 25 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Asian-American
Calories: 540

Ingredients
  

Egg roll bowl base
  • 1 lb ground pork
  • 1 can (14 oz) coleslaw mix
  • 3 tbsp oil
  • 5 garlic, minced
  • 1 tbsp ginger, grated
  • 0.25 cup soy sauce
  • 2 tbsp rice vinegar
  • 1 tbsp sesame oil
  • 1 tsp sriracha
  • 2 green onions, sliced
  • 1 sesame seeds for garnish

Equipment

  • 1 Blackstone griddle

Method
 

Griddle stir-fry
  1. Heat Blackstone griddle to medium-high and add oil. Let it come up to heat so the pork browns instead of steams.
  2. Cook ground pork for 5-6 minutes, breaking it up with spatulas, until browned. Keep spreading it into an even layer for better browning.
  3. Add garlic and ginger and cook for 1 minute until fragrant. Stir constantly so the aromatics don’t burn.
  4. Add coleslaw mix and cook for 5-6 minutes until cabbage is wilted but still has some crunch. Toss and scrape the griddle so vegetables cook evenly.
  5. Combine soy sauce, rice vinegar, sesame oil, and sriracha, then pour over the mixture. Scrape up any browned bits and coat everything.
  6. Toss everything together for 2 minutes. You should see the sauce cling and lightly thicken while the cabbage stays crisp-tender.
  7. Garnish with green onions and sesame seeds. Serve immediately for the best texture contrast.

Notes

For the best griddle texture, don’t overcrowd the pork—spread it out so it browns during the first 5-6 minutes. Store leftovers in an airtight container in the refrigerator up to 3 days; reheat in a skillet or on the griddle until hot, adding a splash of water if the sauce tightens. Freezing isn’t ideal because cabbage can soften, but it’s safe to freeze if needed. For a lighter option, use ground turkey instead of ground pork while keeping the same sauce and cooking times.

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