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Triple Delight Chinese Food Recipe — Three Proteins, One Perfect Dish ⏱ Recipe
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Triple Delight Chinese Food Recipe — Three Proteins, One Perfect Dish

Dravid
Dravid
| June 6, 2026 | ⏱ 9 min read

My local Chinese takeout place closed last year. They made the best this dish food I’d ever had.

They’d been there fifteen years. I ordered from them probably once a week for the last five of those. Their triple delight was the thing I always got — shrimp, beef, and chicken stir-fried with vegetables in a brown garlic sauce that I still think about.

When they shut down I decided to figure out how to make it myself.

Took a few tries. The sauce was the hard part — getting the right balance of savory, slightly sweet, and that umami depth that makes Chinese restaurant food taste the way it does. Once I figured that out, everything else fell into place.

This this dish food recipe is what I’ve been making ever since.

What Is Triple Delight Chinese Food — And Why Everyone Orders It?

this dish food — also called hunan triple delight, mongolian triple delight, or chinese triple delight depending on the restaurant — is a stir-fry dish featuring three proteins (typically chicken, beef, and shrimp) cooked with mixed vegetables in a savory brown sauce.

The name in this this dish food dish refers to the three proteins that make this dish different from a standard single-protein stir-fry. Most Chinese-American restaurants carry their own version of triple delight chinese food of it, though the sauce varies — some use garlic sauce, some use brown sauce, some use a spicy hunan-style preparation.

this dish food is a popular takeout order because you get variety in every bite. One forkful might have shrimp and broccoli, the next has beef and snap peas, the next has chicken and mushrooms. The proteins cook at slightly different rates and textures, which makes the whole dish more interesting than it would be with just one.

What Does Triple Delight Chinese Food Taste Like?

Deep and savory first. The oyster sauce and soy sauce in the brown sauce create a rich, slightly caramel-like depth that coats everything.

Then the garlic — noticeable but not sharp. The ginger adds a quiet warmth underneath. There’s a faint sweetness from the sugar and hoisin that balances the saltiness.

The three proteins each bring their own texture. The beef is chewy and rich. The chicken is tender and mild. The shrimp is firm and slightly sweet. Together they work better than any one of them alone.

Ingredients

Before you start cooking, get every single ingredient prepped and in a bowl. Stir-frying moves faster than most people expect — there’s no time to chop vegetables once the wok is hot. Having everything ready is the single most important thing you can do for this triple delight chinese food recipe.

Proteins:

IngredientAmountNotes
Boneless chicken breast6 ozSliced thin against the grain
Beef sirloin or flank steak6 ozSliced thin against the grain
Large shrimp, peeled and deveined6 ozTails off

Vegetables:

IngredientAmountNotes
Broccoli florets1 cupCut into bite-size pieces
Snap peas½ cupStrings removed
Red bell pepper1 mediumSliced
White mushrooms½ cupSliced
Carrot1 smallSliced thin on diagonal
Baby corn½ cupOptional but traditional
Water chestnuts½ canDrained, sliced

Brown Sauce:

IngredientAmountNotes
Chicken broth½ cupLow sodium
Oyster sauce3 tbspThis is the key ingredient — don’t skip
Soy sauce2 tbspLow sodium
Hoisin sauce1 tbsp 
Sesame oil1 tspToasted
Sugar1 tsp 
Cornstarch1 tbspMixed with 2 tbsp cold water
Garlic4 clovesMinced
Fresh ginger1 tspGrated
Vegetable oil3 tbspFor stir-frying — high smoke point needed

How to Make Triple Delight Chinese Food — Step by Step

Prep: 20 min | Cook: 15 min | Serves: 4

Step 1 — Prep everything before you start cooking.

Making triple delight chinese food moves fast. Have every ingredient prepped, measured, and sitting in bowls before the pan gets hot. Slice all three proteins thin. Mix the sauce ingredients together. Make the cornstarch slurry. Cut all vegetables.

Step 2 — Velvet the proteins (optional but makes a difference).

Toss chicken and beef separately with 1 teaspoon cornstarch and ½ teaspoon soy sauce each. Let sit 10 minutes. This is called velveting — it gives the proteins that silky texture you get at Chinese restaurants.

Step 3 — Cook proteins in batches.

Heat 1 tablespoon oil in a wok or large skillet over high heat until smoking. Cook beef first for 2 minutes — just until barely done. Remove. Add another tablespoon of oil, cook chicken for 3 minutes. Remove. Add shrimp, cook 1.5 to 2 minutes until pink. Remove. Set all aside.

Don’t crowd the pan when making triple delight chinese food. Crowding causes steaming instead of searing.

Step 4 — Stir-fry the vegetables.

Add remaining oil to the same pan. Add garlic and ginger, stir 30 seconds. Add carrots first — they need the most time. After 1 minute, add broccoli, snap peas, and mushrooms. Stir-fry over high heat for 3 minutes. Add bell pepper and water chestnuts last — they just need 1 minute.

Step 5 — Add sauce and combine.

Pour the premixed sauce over the vegetables. Let it bubble for 30 seconds. Add the cornstarch slurry and stir immediately — the sauce will thicken fast. Return all three proteins to the pan. Toss everything together for 1 minute until coated.

Step 6 — Serve immediately.

Triple delight chinese food is best served over steamed white rice. Triple delight chinese food is best eaten immediately while it’s hot.

Triple Delight Chinese Food Variations

Triple delight chinese food adapts well to different flavor directions depending on what you’re in the mood for. The Hunan style brings real heat. The garlic sauce version is lighter and sharper. You can even go fully vegetarian without losing the spirit of the dish.

VariationWhat ChangesResult
Hunan triple delightAdd 1 tbsp chili bean paste and 1 tsp red chili flakes to sauceSpicy, bold, deeply flavored
Garlic sauce versionReplace hoisin with extra garlic and add ½ tsp chili oilLighter color, sharper garlic flavor
Vegetable triple delightReplace proteins with tofu, king oyster mushrooms, and fried eggVegetarian with same concept
Mongolian styleAdd 2 tbsp brown sugar and green onions onlySweeter, thicker, less vegetable-forward

What to Serve With Triple Delight Chinese Food

Triple delight chinese food is a complete protein-and-vegetable dish on its own — you really just need something to put it on or alongside. Keep the sides simple so they don’t compete with the rich brown sauce.

Plain steamed white rice is the right choice. Jasmine rice is my preference — the fragrance works nicely with the brown sauce.

Fried rice on the side if you want to go all in. Egg rolls or spring rolls to start. Hot and sour soup before the main dish.

Nutrition Per Serving

Triple delight chinese food is a genuinely high-protein dish thanks to the three proteins. The sodium is on the higher side from the oyster and soy sauces — if that’s a concern, use low-sodium versions of both. The calorie count doesn’t include rice.

NutrientPer Serving
Calories380 to 420 kcal
Protein38 to 42g
Carbohydrates18 to 22g
Total Fat14 to 16g
Sodium920 to 980mg
Fiber3 to 4g
Sugar6 to 8g

Storing Triple Delight Chinese Food

This dish stores reasonably well for a stir-fry, though the vegetables do soften a bit overnight. The flavor actually improves as the sauce penetrates the proteins more deeply.

Keeps 3 days in the fridge. Reheat in a skillet over medium heat with a tablespoon of water or broth — not the microwave, which makes the shrimp rubbery.

Freezing is not recommended — the shrimp and vegetables suffer significantly in texture.

What is triple delight Chinese food?

Triple delight chinese food is a Chinese-American stir-fry dish featuring three proteins — usually chicken, beef, and shrimp — cooked with mixed vegetables in a savory brown sauce. Different restaurants have their own version — some call it hunan triple delight, some mongolian triple delight, but the concept is the same.

What is in the triple delight chinese food brown sauce?

The base is oyster sauce, soy sauce, chicken broth, hoisin, and sesame oil, thickened with cornstarch. Garlic and ginger go in fresh. It’s the combination of oyster sauce and hoisin that gives Chinese restaurant brown sauce its distinctive depth.

What is the difference between hunan and mongolian triple delight?

Hunan triple delight uses a spicy sauce with chili bean paste and chili oil. Mongolian triple delight is sweeter and uses more brown sugar and green onions without the heat. The base proteins and vegetables are similar in both.

Why is my triple delight chinese food stir-fry watery?

Two reasons usually. Either the pan wasn’t hot enough — you need it screaming hot for stir-fry — or you overcrowded the pan. Cook proteins in batches over high heat. Never crowd.

Can I use one protein instead of three?

Of course. The dish works with just chicken or just beef. But the three-protein combination is what makes triple delight what it is — the variety in texture and flavor with every bite.

Dravid

Triple Delight Chinese Food

Classic Chinese-American stir-fry with chicken, beef, andshrimp cooked with mixed vegetables in a savory oyster sauce brown sauce. Threeproteins, one perfect dish — ready in 35 minutes.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Total Time 35 minutes
Servings: 4
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Chinese-American
Calories: 400

Ingredients
  

Proteins
  • 6 oz boneless chicken breast — sliced thin against the grain
  • 6 oz beef sirloin or flank steak — sliced thin against the grain
  • 6 oz large shrimp — peeled deveined, tails off
Vegetables
  • 1 cup broccoli florets — bite-size pieces
  • ½ cup snap peas — strings removed
  • 1 medium red bell pepper — sliced
  • ½ cup white mushrooms — sliced
  • 1 small carrot — sliced thin on diagonal
  • ½ cup baby corn — optional
  • ½ can water chestnuts — drained and sliced
Brown Sauce
  • ½ cup low sodium chicken broth
  • 3 tbsp oyster sauce
  • 2 tbsp low sodium soy sauce
  • 1 tbsp hoisin sauce
  • 1 tsp toasted sesame oil
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 1 tbsp cornstarch — mixed with 2 tbsp cold water
  • 4 garlic cloves — minced
  • 1 tsp fresh ginger — grated
  • 3 tbsp vegetable oil — for stir-frying

Equipment

  • 1 Carbon steel wok or large skillet (12-inch+) High-heat stir-frying — wider the better
  • 1 Wok spatula / flat wooden spatula Tossing and scraping the wok without scratching
  • 1 Tongs Handling proteins during searing
  • 1 Sharp chef's knife Slicing proteins thin against the grain
  • 1 Cutting board Prepping all proteins and vegetables
  • 1 Small mixing bowls (5-6) Mise en place — each ingredient prepped and ready before cooking
  • 1 Measuring spoons Sauce ingredients require accuracy
  • 1 Small whisk or fork Mixing the brown sauce and cornstarch slurry
  • 1 Serving bowl Wide and shallow works best for plating over rice

Method
 

  1. Mix sauce ingredients (broth, oyster sauce, soy sauce, hoisin, sesame oil, sugar) in a small bowl. Set aside.
  2. Make cornstarch slurry: mix 1 tbsp cornstarch with 2 tbsp cold water. Set aside.
  3. Optional velveting: toss chicken and beef separately with 1 tsp cornstarch and ½ tsp soy sauce each. Let sit 10 minutes.
  4. Heat 1 tbsp oil in a wok or large skillet over high heat until smoking.
  5. Cook beef first — 2 minutes until barely done. Remove and set aside.
  6. Add 1 tbsp oil. Cook chicken — 3 minutes until cooked through. Remove and set aside.
  7. Add shrimp — cook 1.5 to 2 minutes until pink. Remove and set aside.
  8. Add remaining 1 tbsp oil. Add garlic and ginger. Stir 30 seconds.
  9. Add carrots — stir-fry 1 minute.
  10. Add broccoli, snap peas, and mushrooms — stir-fry 3 minutes over high heat.
  11. Add bell pepper and water chestnuts — stir-fry 1 minute.
  12. Pour sauce over vegetables. Let bubble 30 seconds.
  13. Add cornstarch slurry and stir immediately — sauce will thicken quickly.
  14. Return all three proteins to the pan. Toss everything together 1 minute until coated.
  15. Serve immediately over steamed white rice.

Notes

Have ALL ingredients prepped before turning on the heat — stir-frying moves fast
Don’t crowd the pan — cook proteins in separate batches for proper searing
Oyster sauce is the key ingredient — don’t substitute
High heat is essential — the wok should be smoking before proteins go in
Serve immediately — the dish loses texture if it sits
Dravid
✍️ Written by
Dravid


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