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Home › Recipe › Culinary Techniques

Published on December 5, 2025 by Liz Marek · This post may contain affiliate links ·

How to Sauté

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Sautéing is one of those kitchen skills that completely changes the way you cook once you really get it. The keyword here is sauté - a quick, high-heat method that keeps your veggies crisp-tender, your proteins juicy, and your weeknight dinners fast and flavorful.

When I finally slowed down and actually paid attention to what was happening in the pan, everything in my kitchen got better: brighter vegetables, golden-brown chicken, perfectly cooked mushrooms that didn't steam into mush. It's one of those "Ohhh… okay, now I understand" moments.

I started learning sautéing techniques the same way most home cooks do - by burning the garlic. Every. Single. Time. But once I figured out how heat, fat, and moisture work together, I gotta say, I nailed it. Now it's one of my favorite steps in recipes because it builds flavor fast with almost zero effort.

What's In This Blog Post

  • Ingredients & Tools You Need for Sautéing
  • Tips & Tricks for Perfect Sautéing
  • Step-by-Step Instructions
  • Final Thoughts
  • Frequently Asked Questions

Ingredients & Tools You Need for Sautéing

You don't need all of these tools and ingredients every time for sautéing but these are some common tools and ingredients.

close up of a frying pan with oil in it
  • Neutral oil - Used because it can handle higher heat without burning. You can replace it with avocado oil, vegetable oil, or even light olive oil.
  • Unsalted butter - Adds flavor and browning, but burns easily on its own. Combine with oil or replace with ghee for a higher smoke point.
  • Garlic or aromatics - Bring major flavor, sauté fast. Replace with onion, shallots, leeks, or ginger depending on your recipe.
  • Vegetables - Anything from mushrooms to peppers to zucchini works. Replace with frozen veggies (no need to thaw) if you're short on time.
  • Protein - Chicken bites, shrimp, tofu, or beef strips all sauté beautifully. Replace with plant-based proteins or pre-cooked sausage.
  • Salt and pepper - Essential for seasoning and browning. Replace with seasoning blends like SPG, Italian seasoning, or smoked salt.
  • A large skillet - You want something that heats evenly. Nonstick, cast iron, or stainless steel all work.
  • A spatula or tongs - For flipping and moving food around easily. Replace with a wooden spoon or silicone turner.

Tips & Tricks for Perfect Sautéing

The most important rule is this: high heat + a little fat + small pieces of food. That's the whole game.

My biggest tip? Let the pan actually get hot before you add anything. If you add oil to a cold pan, everything soaks it up like a sponge and cooks unevenly. Heat the pan first, then add the oil, then add the ingredients in order of how long they take to cook. Garlic always goes last. Always.

And don't overcrowd the pan. If everything is touching, it steams instead of sautés. Give your ingredients space and they'll reward you with that gorgeous golden color.

Step-by-Step Instructions

close up of a frying pan with oil in it
  1. Preheat your skillet
    Place your pan over medium-high heat and let it get hot for a minute or two until you can feel the heat when you hover your hand above it.
  2. Add your oil or butter
    Pour in just enough to lightly coat the bottom. Swirl it around - it should shimmer, not smoke.
  3. Add your ingredients
    Start with the things that take the longest, like onions or chicken. Save quick-cooking items like garlic or spinach for the end.
  4. Spread everything out
    Give it space so it browns instead of steaming. This is where a big skillet makes a difference.
  5. Let it sit
    The hardest part: don't stir constantly. Let the bottom get golden, then flip or toss.
  6. Season well
    Salt early to help draw out moisture and create browning. Add finishing seasonings at the end for maximum flavor.
  7. Finish with butter or herbs
    Adding a pat of butter or a sprinkle of fresh herbs right before serving takes the flavor to another level.

Final Thoughts

Sautéing is one of those building-block skills that makes the rest of cooking feel easier. Once you know how it works, you can pretty much throw anything into a pan with a splash of oil and make it taste amazing. Whether you're making a quick veggie side, browning meat for a stew, or building flavor for a sauce, this technique is going to be your new best friend.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the best oil for sautéing?

A neutral oil with a high smoke point like avocado or canola works great. You can mix butter and oil for flavor without burning.

Can I sauté frozen veggies?

Yes! Just add them straight in. They'll release more moisture, so use a bigger pan or sauté in batches.

Why do my veggies get soggy?

Your pan is either too crowded or not hot enough. Give them space and crank the heat.

Is sautéing healthy?

It uses very little fat and cooks food fast, so it keeps nutrients intact. It's one of the healthier cooking methods.

Recipe

close up of carrots sauteeing in a large pan

How To Sauté

Sautéing is a method of high-heat cooking that adds tons of flavor. It's one of those skills every cook needs to master to make the best dishes.
Print Recipe
Prep Time: 5 minutes minutes
Cook Time: 10 minutes minutes
Total Time: 15 minutes minutes
Course: Side Dish
Cuisine: American
Servings: 4 servings
Calories: 106kcal
Author: Liz Marek

Ingredients

  • 2 Tablespoons neutral oil or ghee

Instructions

  • Heat the pan: Place a large skillet over medium-high until a few drops of water evaporates instantly
  • Add in your ingredients that you want to sauté. Toss to coat the ingredients evenly with the oil.
  • Continue cooking and moving the ingredients until the desired amount of doneness has been achieved.
  • Finish: Sprinkle with fresh herbs, toss well, and taste for seasoning.

Video

Notes

  • Remember the key to a good saute is hot pan, neutral high heat oil, the correct amount of ingredients in the pan. Don't overcrowd the pan.

Nutrition

Serving: 1serving | Calories: 106kcal | Carbohydrates: 12g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 7g | Saturated Fat: 2g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 3g | Trans Fat: 0.1g | Cholesterol: 8mg | Sodium: 79mg | Potassium: 365mg | Fiber: 3g | Sugar: 6g | Vitamin A: 19034IU | Vitamin C: 7mg | Calcium: 39mg | Iron: 0.4mg
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

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About Liz Marek

Liz Marek is a professional cake artist, sweet and savory recipe developer, and the founder of Sugar Geek Show, where she teaches cooking, baking and cake decorating through detailed tutorials, food science explanations, and kitchen-tested recipes. She has been creating recipes and teaching baking techniques since 2008, helping bakers of all skill levels gain the confidence to make professional-quality desserts at home.

Liz is known for breaking down complex cooking and baking concepts into simple, approachable methods. Her work focuses on helping people understand not just how a recipe works, but why it works. Through Sugar Geek Show, she shares step-by-step recipes, cake decorating tutorials, and practical baking guides designed to make professional techniques accessible to everyone.

Over the years, Liz has taught thousands of students through online tutorials, classes, and educational content focused on real kitchen results. Her recipes are carefully tested and written to help people succeed the first time they make them.

When she’s not developing recipes or teaching baking techniques, Liz also hosts curated travel experiences for women through her travel brand Soul Sisters.

You can find Liz’s latest recipes, baking tutorials, and food science tips at Sugar Geek Show.

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Hi, I'm Liz! I'm passionate about creating reliable, foolproof recipes that don't just tell you how to cook, but why things work - so you can skip the guesswork and confidently make the best sweet and savory dishes of your life.

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