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Beef Stroganoff with Cream of Mushroom Soup – Easy Creamy Dinner

E
By Emma Delacourt · March 17, 2026 · 19 min read
beef stroganoff with cream of mushroom soup
Reader Rating★★★★★
Total Time35 mins
Servings4 servings

There are weeknights when only something deeply savory, silky, and deeply satisfying will do — and beef stroganoff with cream of mushroom soup delivers exactly that. In my kitchen tests, this easy beef stroganoff cream of mushroom soup recipe has become the most-requested dish in my household. Tender strips of seared beef, earthy mushrooms, and a luscious, cream-enriched sauce come together in a single skillet in under 35 minutes. It’s cozy in the truest sense — not as a marketing word, but because the sauce clings to every noodle and the aroma fills the kitchen long before dinner hits the table.

The secret isn’t a long ingredient list. It’s understanding why each component behaves the way it does — and using that knowledge to get restaurant-quality results from pantry staples.

Recipe at a Glance

Prep Time
10
minutes
Cook Time
25
minutes
Total Time
35
minutes
Servings
4
portions
Calories
520
per serving

Why You’ll Love This Recipe

Classic Russian stroganoff traditionally uses sour cream and a carefully reduced stock — beautiful, but demanding. The cream of mushroom soup shortcut isn’t a compromise; it’s a smart technical swap. Condensed mushroom soup provides pre-thickened, deeply savory stock concentrate, sodium, and umami in a single can. You’re essentially adding a pre-built sauce foundation that would otherwise require a 20-minute reduction.

I’ve found that the resulting sauce has better cling than a made-from-scratch version in many tests — the modified starch in the condensed soup creates a glossy, velvety coat on the noodles that sour cream alone can’t replicate.

Add genuine seared beef on top of that foundation, and you get two layers of savory depth — the Maillard-browned crust on the beef and the concentrated mushroom umami in the sauce — working together. That’s why this dish punches so far above its effort level.

The Butcher’s Selection – Ingredients & Cut Guide

Cut selection matters enormously here. You want a beef cut that stays tender after a quick sear and short braise — not one that needs hours of slow cooking to soften. Here’s what works and why:

Ingredients (Serves 4)
  • 600 g (1.3 lb) sirloin or ribeye steakSliced ¼-inch thick against the grain. Sirloin offers lean tenderness; ribeye adds intermuscular fat for extra juiciness.
  • 1 can (10.5 oz / 298 g) condensed cream of mushroom soupDo not dilute — used undiluted for maximum sauce body.
  • ½ cup (120 ml) beef brothLow-sodium preferred for control.
  • ½ cup (120 ml) sour creamFull-fat; added off heat to prevent curdling.
  • 250 g (9 oz) cremini or white mushroomsSliced.
  • 1 medium yellow onionThinly sliced.
  • 3 garlic clovesMinced.
  • 1 tbsp Dijon mustardSharpness that cuts through the cream richness.
  • 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • 2 tbsp butterFor sautéing mushrooms; fat medium for browning.
  • 1 tbsp neutral oilFor searing the beef.
  • Salt and black pepperTo taste.
  • 300 g (10.5 oz) egg noodles or wide pastaFor serving.
  • Fresh flat-leaf parsleyTo garnish.
💡 Butcher’s Tip Always slice beef against the grain — perpendicular to the direction the muscle fibers run. This shortens the fibers, dramatically reducing chewiness. For sirloin, look for the fiber direction along the long edge of the steak and cut across it. A properly sliced thin strip will be noticeably more tender than one cut with the grain, even before any cooking.

How to Make Beef Stroganoff with Cream of Mushroom Soup

Every step here is engineered for maximum flavor. The technique is straightforward, but the order and temperature decisions are what separate a genuinely good stroganoff from a flat, grey one.

  1. Slice and season the beef. Pat beef dry with paper towels — surface moisture is the enemy of browning. Slice against the grain into strips about ¼ inch thick and 2 inches long. Season generously with salt, pepper, and smoked paprika. Let the seasoned strips rest on a plate for 5 minutes at room temperature while you prep everything else.
  2. Sear the beef in batches — high heat, no crowding. Heat a large skillet (cast iron or stainless) over high heat until it begins to smoke slightly. Add oil, then lay beef strips in a single layer with space between each. Do not stir for 90 seconds. This sustained contact is essential for the Maillard reaction — the protein-sugar browning that creates the caramelized, mahogany crust. Flip once, sear 30 more seconds, then transfer to a plate. Sear in 2–3 batches so the pan stays hot. Target 145°F / 63°C for medium
  3. Sauté mushrooms until deeply golden. Reduce heat to medium-high. Add butter to the same pan — don’t wipe it; those browned bits are flavor. Add mushrooms in a single layer and leave them undisturbed for 3 minutes. Mushrooms are 90% water; constant stirring releases steam and prevents browning. Once golden, stir and cook 2 more minutes. Add onion, cook 3 minutes until softened. Add garlic for 60 seconds until fragrant.
  4. Build the sauce base. Add Dijon mustard and Worcestershire to the pan, stirring for 30 seconds to bloom the flavors in the residual fat. Pour in beef broth, scraping up any fond from the pan bottom — this deglazing step dissolves concentrated flavor into your sauce. Add condensed cream of mushroom soup (undiluted) and stir until smooth. The sauce will be thick and glossy.
  5. Return beef and simmer briefly. Return seared beef strips to the pan. Reduce heat to low and simmer uncovered for 5–7 minutes, just long enough for the beef to absorb the sauce without toughening. Sirloin strips will tighten in texture if overcooked past an internal temp of 160°F / 71°C.
  6. Stir in sour cream off the heat. Remove pan from heat completely before adding sour cream. Residual heat above 185°F (85°C) will cause the proteins in sour cream to separate, breaking the sauce into a grainy, curdled texture. Off-heat, stir in sour cream until fully incorporated and silky. Taste for seasoning. Serve immediately over cooked egg noodles, garnished with fresh parsley.
🔬 Meat Science Note Sirloin and ribeye contain relatively little collagen — the connective tissue that requires long, slow cooking to dissolve into gelatin. This means they become tender quickly with high heat but turn tough if overcooked. The 5–7 minute simmer is a precise window: long enough for the beef to absorb sauce flavor, short enough to preserve that tender, slightly pink interior.

Pro Cooking Tips – Heat Management & Equipment

Use a wide, heavy pan. Surface area determines how much beef you can sear at once without steaming. A 12-inch cast iron or stainless skillet handles this recipe without batching more than twice. Non-stick pans don’t reach the surface temperature needed for Maillard browning on beef — skip them here.

Don’t dilute the condensed soup. The can’s directions call for adding water for use as a soup, but in a sauce application you want the full concentrated body. Adding broth later gives you liquid control without diluting the thickening starch that makes the sauce so clingy and smooth. The Cookful’s stroganoff technique guide has a useful breakdown of how different soup concentrations affect the final sauce consistency.

The fond is non-negotiable. After searing beef and browning mushrooms, your pan will have dark, sticky residue. This is the most flavorful thing in the pan. Deglazing with beef broth and scraping those bits directly into the sauce is what separates a rich, complex stroganoff from a one-note one.

Season the beef before searing, not after. Salt draws surface moisture out of the meat. Applied 5 minutes before cooking, that moisture re-absorbs into the beef, pulling seasoning deeper into the muscle. Applied after cooking, salt sits on the surface and tastes flat.

Recipe Variations

🫕 Slow Cooker

Sear beef and sauté aromatics first — always. Transfer to slow cooker with mushroom soup, broth, mustard, and Worcestershire. Cook on LOW 4–5 hours or HIGH 2–2.5 hours. Stir in sour cream in the last 15 minutes with the lid off to prevent curdling from extended heat.

⚡ Instant Pot

Use Sauté mode to sear beef and cook aromatics. Add soup and broth, seal, and cook on Manual HIGH for 10 minutes with natural release for 5 minutes. Switch back to Sauté, stir in sour cream off the direct element, and let residual heat thicken the sauce.

🥩 Keto Version

Serve over spiralized zucchini (zoodles) or cauliflower mash instead of egg noodles. Swap condensed soup for a low-carb cream of mushroom (homemade with heavy cream and fresh mushrooms). Drops carbs from ~42g to under 10g per serving with no compromise on the sauce itself.

🧀 Extra Creamy Version

Stir in 2 oz (55 g) of softened cream cheese along with the sour cream at the end. The cream cheese adds body, richness, and a velvety tang without altering the flavor profile. It also stabilizes the sauce against reheating, making it the best option for meal prep batches.

What to Serve With This Dish

Stroganoff is a rich, cream-forward dish — pairings that provide acidity, crunch, or freshness balance it best. For a full Eastern European-inspired spread, my beef and cabbage stir-fry makes an excellent lighter companion that shares the same bold, savory character without competing for plate space.

  • Buttered egg noodles or wide pappardelle
  • Steamed white rice for a heartier base
  • Cucumber dill salad with red wine vinegar
  • Crusty sourdough for sauce-mopping
  • Simple roasted carrots with honey and thyme
  • Pickled beets or sauerkraut for acidic contrast

Storage & Meal Prep – Keeping the Sauce Silky

Sour cream-based sauces need a little extra care during storage and reheating. The key is gentle, low heat — high temperatures break the dairy emulsion and produce that split, grainy texture everyone’s experienced with leftover stroganoff.

🧊
Refrigerator

Store sauce separately from noodles in an airtight container for up to 3 days. Noodles absorb sauce overnight and turn mushy.

❄️
Freezer

Freeze sauce only (without sour cream) for up to 2 months. Add fresh sour cream after reheating for best texture.

🔥
Reheating

Warm in a skillet over low heat with 2 tbsp of broth or water, stirring gently. Never microwave on full power — it breaks the emulsion.

💡 Meal Prep Note If prepping ahead, cook the beef and sauce fully but hold the sour cream. Reheat the base when ready to serve and stir in fresh sour cream at the end. This two-stage approach keeps the sauce texture as smooth as day one, even after 3 days in the fridge.

Nutritional Information (Per Serving)

Based on 4 servings using sirloin steak, full-fat sour cream, and condensed cream of mushroom soup. Served over 75 g dry egg noodles per person. Values are approximate.

NutrientPer Serving% Daily Value*
Calories520 kcal26%
Total Fat22 g28%
Saturated Fat9 g45%
Protein38 g76%
Total Carbohydrates42 g15%
Dietary Fiber2.1 g8%
Sodium710 mg31%
Iron4.1 mg23%
Calcium98 mg8%

* Percent Daily Values based on a 2,000 calorie diet.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • 🚫
    Crowding the pan during searing

    Too much beef in the pan at once drops the surface temperature below the Maillard threshold of approximately 280°F (138°C). The result is grey, steamed strips with zero caramelized crust — and a watery sauce from all that released moisture. Work in batches and keep the heat high.

  • 🚫
    Adding sour cream over direct heat

    This is the most common reason stroganoff sauces look broken and grainy. Dairy proteins — specifically casein — coagulate and separate when exposed to temperatures above 185°F (85°C). Always pull the pan off the burner completely before stirring in sour cream, and stir gently in a slow, circular motion.

  • 🚫
    Slicing beef with the grain

    Muscle fibers running the length of your cut create a chewy, stringy texture when left intact. Cutting perpendicular to those fibers — against the grain — shortens them to under half an inch, producing dramatically more tender bites. Look at the steak’s surface before slicing and orient your knife at 90 degrees to the visible fiber lines.

  • 🚫
    Overcooking the beef in the sauce

    Unlike tough cuts (chuck, shank) that benefit from prolonged braising, sirloin and ribeye have minimal collagen. Extended simmering doesn’t tenderize them — it toughens them. The 5–7 minute simmer is a maximum, not a guideline. Once your strips reach 160°F / 71°C, pull the pan off heat.

  • 🚫
    Diluting the condensed soup before adding

    Adding water directly to the can before using it in the sauce thins out both the thickening starches and the concentrated mushroom flavor. Use condensed soup straight from the can and control liquid separately with measured broth. This gives you a sauce with proper body and full umami depth.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use ground beef instead of sliced steak?
Yes — ground beef stroganoff is a popular, budget-friendly variation. Brown 500 g (1.1 lb) of 80/20 ground beef using the same Maillard technique (don’t stir too early), drain excess fat, then proceed from step 3. The sauce is identical; the texture is heartier and less refined but equally satisfying. Ground beef must reach 160°F / 71°C internal temperature.
What’s the best cut of beef for stroganoff?
Sirloin is the ideal balance of tenderness and value for a quick-cook method. Tenderloin (filet) is the most tender option but expensive for a sauce dish. Ribeye adds more intramuscular fat and richer flavor but costs more. Avoid chuck, round, or brisket — these require hours of braising to become tender and will be tough after just 7 minutes of simmering.
Can I substitute Greek yogurt for sour cream?
Full-fat Greek yogurt works as a substitute with a slightly tangier, less rich result. The key is the same: add it completely off heat. Low-fat Greek yogurt has even less fat to buffer the proteins, making it more prone to curdling. If using yogurt, temper it by stirring a spoonful of hot sauce into the yogurt first, then stir that mixture into the pan.
Why does my stroganoff sauce taste flat?
Flat sauce almost always comes from skipping the Maillard step — either the beef wasn’t properly seared, or the mushrooms weren’t browned long enough. The caramelized fond from both provides the flavor foundation the cream sauce builds on. Without it, you’re essentially tasting seasoned cream. A second common cause is using low-sodium broth without adjusting final seasoning — always taste and salt at the end.
Is this recipe gluten-free?
Standard condensed cream of mushroom soup contains wheat flour as a thickener and is not gluten-free. To make this recipe GF, use a certified gluten-free condensed mushroom soup (several brands offer this) and serve over rice, gluten-free pasta, or mashed potatoes. All other ingredients in the recipe are naturally gluten-free.
Can I make this ahead for a dinner party?
Absolutely. Prepare everything up to (but not including) adding the sour cream. Refrigerate the sauce and beef together for up to 24 hours. When ready to serve, gently reheat over low heat, stir in fresh sour cream off the burner, and serve immediately. The sauce will actually taste richer the next day as the flavors meld overnight.

Made This Recipe?

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Beef Stroganoff with Cream of Mushroom Soup – Easy Creamy Dinner

Beef Stroganoff with Cream of Mushroom Soup – Easy Creamy Dinner

Tender strips of seared beef, earthy mushrooms, and a luscious, cream-enriched sauce come together in a single skillet in under 35 minutes.

Prep time10 mins
Cook time25 mins
Total35 mins
Servings 4 servings
Cuisine Russian
Calories 520
Quantities:
  • 600 g sirloin or ribeye steak sliced ¼-inch thick against the grain
  • 1 can condensed cream of mushroom soup 10.5 oz / 298 g, do not dilute
  • ½ cup beef broth low-sodium preferred
  • ½ cup sour cream full-fat
  • 250 g cremini or white mushrooms sliced
  • 1 medium yellow onion thinly sliced
  • 3 garlic cloves minced
  • 1 tbsp Dijon mustard
  • 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • to taste Salt
  • to taste black pepper
  • 2 tbsp butter
  • 1 tbsp neutral oil
  • 300 g egg noodles or wide pasta
  • Fresh flat-leaf parsley to garnish

Prepare Beef

1

Pat beef dry with paper towels. Slice against the grain into strips about ¼ inch thick and 2 inches long. Season generously with salt, pepper, and smoked paprika. Let the seasoned strips rest on a plate for 5 minutes at room temperature.

Sear Beef

2

Heat a large skillet (cast iron or stainless) over high heat until it begins to smoke slightly. Add oil, then lay beef strips in a single layer with space between each. Do not stir for 90 seconds. Flip once, sear 30 more seconds, then transfer to a plate. Sear in 2–3 batches.

Sauté Mushrooms & Onion

3

Reduce heat to medium-high. Add butter to the same pan. Add mushrooms in a single layer and leave them undisturbed for 3 minutes. Once golden, stir and cook 2 more minutes. Add onion, cook 3 minutes until softened. Add garlic for 60 seconds until fragrant.

Build Sauce

4

Add Dijon mustard and Worcestershire to the pan, stirring for 30 seconds. Pour in beef broth, scraping up any fond. Add condensed cream of mushroom soup (undiluted) and stir until smooth.

Simmer & Finish

5

Return seared beef strips to the pan. Reduce heat to low and simmer uncovered for 5–7 minutes. Remove pan from heat completely before adding sour cream. Stir in sour cream until fully incorporated and silky. Taste for seasoning. Serve immediately over cooked egg noodles, garnished with fresh parsley.

  • large skillet
  • cast iron skillet
  • stainless skillet
Servingper serving
Calories520 kcal
Carbohydrates42 g
Protein38 g
Fat22 g
Saturated Fat9 g
Sodium710 mg
Fiber2.1 g

Classic Russian stroganoff traditionally uses sour cream and a carefully reduced stock.

Did You Try Our Recipe ?

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Scrumptious

March 25, 2026

My husband (who is extremely picky) loved the liver & onions so much!! I didn’t have any beef broth or Sherry so I used about a tbl of Worcestershire and 1/4 c of white wine …..it was scrumptious

Camille

Response from MeatRecipesBox

Oh wow, I’m so happy to hear that!! 😍 I love that you made it work with what you had on hand — Worcestershire and white wine sound like a delicious twist. So glad your husband enjoyed it, especially being picky! Thank you for sharing your version, it makes me smile knowing it turned out scrumptious!

This was amazing

March 6, 2026

This recipe turned out really amazing! It’s juicy and spiced deliciously. I definitely would use less of the spicy pepper next time, but it really was delicious and I don’t think I’ll make chicken legs any other way from now on.!

Emily

Response from MeatRecipesBox

Thank you for taking the time to leave such a thoughtful review. I’m really glad to hear the recipe turned out juicy and full of flavor for you. That’s exactly what I was hoping for when putting it together. Good call on the spicy pepper as well. Adjusting the heat level to your own taste is always the best approach, and using a little less next time should make it just right for you. I really appreciate you trying the recipe and sharing your experience. It’s great to know it worked so well for you.

I Didn’t Expect This Cornbeef Hash Recipe to Taste This Good!!

February 20, 2026

One skillet. A handful of simple ingredients. Thirty minutes on the clock. And somehow… I ended up with the crispiest, most comforting cornbeef hash recipe I’ve made in years.

I wasn’t expecting much—just a quick, no-fuss meal. But that first bite? Crispy edges, tender potatoes, smoky corned beef, a little kick of pepper. It tasted like something straight off a cozy diner griddle.

Honestly, it caught me off guard—in the best way. Here’s why this simple skillet completely won me over.

Georgiana

Emma Delacourt

Emma Delacourt

Recipe Developer & Founder, MeatRecipesBox

Emma has been developing and testing meat recipes since 2019. She focuses on temperature precision, food science, and making restaurant-quality results accessible for home cooks. Every recipe on this site is tested multiple times before publishing.

Read full bio →

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