High protein hot honey beef bowl — easy, bold, and ready in 25 minutes

Total Time: 25 mins Difficulty: Beginner
Seasoned ground beef and roasted sweet potato in a sticky hot honey sauce, topped with a fried egg, avocado, and broccolini
A gray ceramic bowl filled with seasoned ground beef, roasted sweet potato cubes, broccolini, sliced avocado, and a fried egg drizzled with sticky hot honey sauce and garnished with sesame seeds, red chili, and fresh cilantro on a wooden surface pinit

Hot honey is one of those things that once it enters your kitchen, it never leaves. Sweet, sticky, with just enough heat to make you pay attention — it turns even the most basic ingredients into something that feels intentional and exciting. I started drizzling it on everything about a year ago and eventually landed on this bowl, which has since become one of my most made recipes.

Ground beef, roasted sweet potato cubes, a perfectly fried egg, sliced avocado, and broccolini — all sitting in a bowl together and finished with that glossy hot honey sauce and a scatter of sesame seeds. It sounds simple because it is. But the flavor combination is anything but basic. Sweet, savory, spicy, creamy — every element earns its place in this bowl.

The best part? Twenty-five minutes from start to finish and you have a high protein meal that genuinely tastes like something you’d order at a restaurant and pay way too much for. Let’s make it at home instead.

Why you’ll love this recipe

  • That hot honey sauce. Let’s just lead with the most important thing. The sauce is sticky, sweet, spicy, and slightly umami from the soy sauce. It coats the beef and sweet potato in the most incredible way and ties every component of this bowl together. You will want to put it on everything else in your kitchen once you taste it.
  • 45 grams of protein per bowl. Between the ground beef and the egg, this bowl genuinely delivers on the high protein promise. No protein powder, no supplements — just real whole food ingredients pulling their weight.
  • Ready in 25 minutes. The sweet potatoes roast while you cook the beef. Everything finishes at roughly the same time and comes together in the bowl in about two minutes. Minimal waiting, maximum payoff.
  • One pan plus one tray. The sweet potatoes go on a roasting tray, the beef cooks in one pan, and the egg fries in that same pan after. Clean up is genuinely minimal which, let’s be honest, matters just as much as the taste.
  • Nutritionally complete. Complex carbs from the sweet potato, protein from the beef and egg, healthy fats from the avocado, fiber and greens from the broccolini. This bowl covers all the bases without you having to think about it.
  • Endlessly adaptable. Swap the ground beef for ground turkey or chicken. Use butternut squash instead of sweet potato. Add rice or quinoa as a base if you want more carbs. This recipe is a framework — build it your way.

Ingredients and key notes

For the roasted sweet potato:

  • 2 medium sweet potatoes, peeled and cut into 1-inch cubes
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1/2 teaspoon smoked paprika
  • 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
  • Salt and black pepper to taste

Note: Cut the sweet potato cubes as evenly as possible so they roast at the same rate. Uneven cubes mean some are perfectly caramelized while others are still firm — and nobody wants a surprise crunch in their sweet potato.

Note: Don’t crowd the roasting tray. Give the cubes space so they roast and caramelize rather than steam. One layer, spread out, no overlapping.

For the ground beef:

  • 1 lb lean ground beef (80/20 or leaner)
  • 1 tablespoon sesame oil
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 teaspoon fresh ginger, grated
  • 2 tablespoons soy sauce (or tamari for gluten free)
  • 1 tablespoon oyster sauce
  • 1 teaspoon rice vinegar
  • Salt and black pepper to taste

Note: Don’t stir the beef too much while it cooks. Let it sit in the pan and develop a proper brown crust before breaking it up. That browning is flavor — don’t rush past it.

Note: Fresh ginger makes a real difference here. Ground ginger works in a pinch but fresh ginger has a brightness that the ground version just cannot replicate. A small knob of fresh ginger goes a long way.

For the hot honey sauce:

  • 3 tablespoons honey
  • 1–2 teaspoons hot sauce (Frank’s RedHot or similar)
  • 1 teaspoon soy sauce
  • 1/2 teaspoon chili flakes
  • 1/2 teaspoon sesame oil

Note: Start with one teaspoon of hot sauce and taste before adding more. The heat level is entirely up to you. If you want it genuinely spicy, go two teaspoons and add extra chili flakes on top when serving.

Note: You can buy store-bought hot honey — Mike’s Hot Honey is widely available and excellent. But making it from scratch takes about 90 seconds and gives you complete control over the heat level.

For the broccolini:

  • 1 bunch broccolini, trimmed
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • 1 teaspoon soy sauce

Note: Broccolini cooks fast — 3 to 4 minutes in a hot pan is all it needs. You want it bright green with slightly crispy edges, not soft and mushy. Overcooked broccolini is a tragedy that is entirely avoidable.

For the bowl:

  • 4 eggs, fried to your preference
  • 1 large avocado, sliced
  • 2 cups cooked white rice or brown rice as a base (optional)
  • Sesame seeds for garnish
  • Fresh cilantro for garnish
  • Sliced red chili for garnish
  • Spring onions, sliced for garnish

Step-by-step instructions

Step 1: Roast the sweet potatoes

Preheat your oven to 400°F / 200°C. Toss the sweet potato cubes with olive oil, smoked paprika, garlic powder, salt, and pepper. Spread them in a single layer on a lined baking tray — no crowding. Roast for 20–22 minutes, flipping halfway through, until the edges are caramelized and golden. They should be tender inside and slightly crispy on the outside. Set aside when done.

Step 2: Make the hot honey sauce

While the sweet potatoes roast, combine honey, hot sauce, soy sauce, chili flakes, and sesame oil in a small bowl. Whisk until fully combined. Taste it — adjust the heat and sweetness to your preference. This takes about 90 seconds and can be done well in advance. Set aside.

Step 3: Cook the ground beef

Heat sesame oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the minced garlic and grated ginger and cook for about 60 seconds until fragrant. Add the ground beef and press it into the pan. Let it cook undisturbed for 2 minutes to develop a proper brown crust on the bottom. Then break it up with a wooden spoon and continue cooking for another 3–4 minutes until fully browned and cooked through. Add soy sauce, oyster sauce, and rice vinegar. Stir to combine and cook for another minute. Remove from heat.

Step 4: Cook the broccolini

In the same skillet over medium-high heat, add the broccolini with a drizzle of olive oil. Cook for 3–4 minutes, tossing occasionally, until bright green and slightly charred at the edges. Add a splash of soy sauce in the last minute of cooking. Remove and set aside.

Step 5: Fry the eggs

In the same pan over medium heat, fry your eggs to preference. For this bowl, a runny yolk works best — it breaks over the beef and sweet potato and acts almost like a sauce. About 2–3 minutes for a set white with a runny yolk. Season with salt and pepper.

Step 6: Assemble the bowls

Start with a base of rice if using. Add the ground beef, roasted sweet potato cubes, and broccolini around the bowl. Place the fried egg in the center. Fan the avocado slices to one side. Drizzle the hot honey sauce generously over everything. Finish with sesame seeds, fresh cilantro, sliced red chili, and spring onions. Serve immediately.

Serving suggestions

  • Serve over white rice for a more filling meal or skip the rice entirely for a lower carb version — the bowl holds up perfectly either way.
  • Brown rice or cauliflower rice both work as base alternatives if you want more fiber or fewer carbs respectively.
  • Add a drizzle of sriracha alongside the hot honey sauce if you want an extra layer of heat on top of heat. Totally optional but highly recommended if you like things spicy.
  • A sprinkle of toasted sesame seeds right before serving adds a subtle nuttiness that complements the hot honey sauce beautifully.
  • For meal prep purposes, keep the fried egg separate and fry it fresh when you are ready to eat. A day-old fried egg reheated is nobody’s idea of a good time.
  • Swap the broccolini for bok choy, spinach, or regular broccoli if that is what you have. Any green vegetable works in this bowl — it just needs something fresh and slightly bitter to balance the sweetness of the honey.

Storage tips

Ground beef: Store cooked ground beef in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. Reheat in a skillet over medium heat with a splash of water or extra soy sauce to bring it back to life. It reheats incredibly well and is one of the best meal prep proteins out there.

Roasted sweet potato: Store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. Reheat in the oven at 375°F for 8–10 minutes or in a hot skillet for a few minutes to get the edges crispy again. Avoid microwaving them if you can — they go soft and lose that caramelized texture.

Hot honey sauce: Store in a sealed jar at room temperature for up to 2 weeks. It actually gets better as it sits — the chili flakes infuse further into the honey and the heat deepens. Give it a stir before using.

Avocado: Always slice fresh. Store any leftover avocado with the pit, wrapped tightly in plastic wrap, with a squeeze of lime juice on the cut surface to slow browning.

Broccolini: Best eaten fresh but stores in the fridge for up to 2 days. Reheat quickly in a hot pan — not the microwave.

Make-ahead tip: Cook the beef, roast the sweet potatoes, and make the hot honey sauce up to 3 days ahead. Store everything separately. When ready to eat, reheat the beef and sweet potato, cook a fresh egg and broccolini, assemble, and drizzle. The whole thing comes together in under 10 minutes from prepped components.

Let’s wrap this up

This bowl is everything I want in a weeknight meal. It is fast, it is genuinely delicious, it makes you feel good after eating it, and it requires almost no cleanup. That hot honey sauce alone is worth making the recipe for — and once you have it in your fridge you will find yourself reaching for it on eggs, on roasted vegetables, on pretty much anything that holds still long enough.

Cooking should feel like this more often. Simple ingredients, a little technique, and flavors that genuinely surprise you. That is what we are going for at Recipes by Kip every single time.

Make this bowl, break that egg yolk, drizzle that hot honey, and enjoy every single bite. Then come back and tell me about it in the comments.

Until next time — keep it simple, keep it delicious.

With love, Kip.

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 10 mins Cook Time 15 mins Total Time 25 mins
Estimated Cost: $ 13

Description

This high protein hot honey beef bowl brings together savory seasoned ground beef, caramelized roasted sweet potato, crispy broccolini, creamy avocado slices, and a runny fried egg — all tied together with a bold sticky hot honey sauce that hits sweet, spicy, and umami all at once. It is a complete meal in one bowl, packed with protein and real nutrition, and ready in under 30 minutes on any given weeknight.

Ingredients

Roasted sweet potato:

Ground beef:

Hot honey sauce:

Broccolini:

Bowl toppings:

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 400°F / 200°C. Toss sweet potato cubes with olive oil and seasonings. Roast for 20–22 minutes, flipping halfway, until caramelized and tender.
  2. Mix all hot honey sauce ingredients in a small bowl. Taste and adjust heat. Set aside.
  3. Heat sesame oil in a skillet over medium-high. Cook garlic and ginger for 60 seconds. Add beef, brown undisturbed for 2 minutes, then break up and cook through. Add sauces and stir. Remove from heat.
  4. In the same pan, cook broccolini with olive oil for 3–4 minutes until bright green and slightly charred. Add soy sauce in the last minute.
  5. Fry eggs in the same pan to your preference — runny yolk recommended.
  6. Assemble bowls with rice base, beef, sweet potato, broccolini, and fried egg in the center. Add avocado slices, drizzle hot honey sauce generously, and garnish with sesame seeds, cilantro, red chili, and spring onions.
Keywords: high protein hot honey beef bowl, hot honey beef bowl, ground beef rice bowl, high protein bowl recipe, easy beef bowl, sweet potato beef bowl, hot honey sauce recipe, quick high protein dinner
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Tag #recipesbykip and #deliciousrecipesbykip if you made this recipe. Follow @recipesbykip on Instagram for more recipes.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:

Can I use ground turkey or chicken instead of beef?

Absolutely. Ground turkey and ground chicken both work well in this bowl. The flavor will be slightly lighter and less rich than beef but the hot honey sauce is bold enough to carry everything. If you use ground turkey, add an extra tablespoon of soy sauce and a little extra sesame oil to compensate for the lower fat content.

Can I make this without the egg?

Yes. The egg adds protein and that runny yolk creates a natural sauce element when broken, but the bowl works without it. If you want to replace the protein, add an extra half pound of beef, some edamame, or a handful of roasted chickpeas on top instead.

How spicy is the hot honey sauce?

At one teaspoon of hot sauce with half a teaspoon of chili flakes, it is mildly spicy — more of a warm tingle than a full burn. For more heat, go two teaspoons of hot sauce and add extra fresh sliced chili on top. For a completely mild version that kids can eat, reduce the hot sauce to a few drops and skip the chili flakes entirely. The sweetness of the honey still shines through beautifully.

Can I meal prep this bowl for the week?

Yes — this is one of the best meal prep bowls out there. Cook the beef, roast the sweet potatoes, and make the hot honey sauce ahead of time. Store everything separately in the fridge for up to 4 days. Fry a fresh egg and cook the broccolini each day when you are ready to eat. Assembly takes less than 5 minutes once the components are prepped.

What can I use instead of broccolini?

Regular broccoli florets, bok choy, spinach, kale, or snap peas all work well. Any green vegetable that can be quickly sauteed in a hot pan fits this bowl. The key is keeping it slightly crisp — you want texture contrast against the soft sweet potato and rich beef.

Is this recipe gluten free?

It can be very easily. Simply swap the regular soy sauce for tamari and make sure your oyster sauce is gluten free — there are several widely available gluten free oyster sauce options. Everything else in the recipe is naturally gluten free. Same great flavor, no wheat.

A self-taught Cook, Filmmaker, and Creative Director

Most days you can find me in the kitchen experimenting with new recipes or behind my camera capturing the stories food tells. What I’m most passionate about is creating dishes that are quick, comforting, and surprisingly healthy—and sharing them with you.

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