Greggs Steak Bake Homemade Recipe UK 2026
Greggs Steak Bake
Homemade Recipe UK 2026
Flaky, golden puff pastry wrapped around a rich, peppery beef filling — made right in your own kitchen. Tastes remarkably close to the real thing, I promise!
Why I Started Making Greggs at Home
I’ve queued outside Greggs in the pouring rain for a Steak Bake more times than I’d like to admit. There’s something about that golden, flaky pastry — the way it shatters when you bite through it — and the thick, glossy beef filling underneath that just hits differently. It’s proper comfort food, isn’t it?
But in 2026, with prices everywhere creeping up, I decided to have a proper crack at making it myself. After a fair few trial runs (and some fairly tragic early attempts, let me tell you), I’ve landed on a recipe that genuinely surprised me. The family couldn’t believe these came out of our oven rather than a paper bag.
This guide is everything I wish I’d had when I started — from exactly where to buy your ingredients in the UK, to step-by-step instructions that won’t leave you confused, plus a breakdown of costs, nutrition, and answers to the questions I get asked the most.
Greggs Steak Bake Homemade Recipe UK 2026 — That iconic golden pastry, baked at home!
Check out the Greggs Sausage Roll Recipe
What Exactly Is a Greggs Steak Bake?
If you’re new to the cult of Greggs (unlikely if you’re from the UK, but welcome!), a Steak Bake is one of the bakery chain’s most beloved savoury pastries. It’s essentially a rectangular puff pastry parcel filled with diced beef, beef gravy, and diced onion — all sealed up, egg-washed until golden, and baked until perfectly crisp.
Greggs sells millions of them every year. The Steak Bake sits alongside the famous sausage roll as one of the undisputed kings of the UK high street. In 2026, a single Steak Bake from Greggs costs around £2.10–£2.25 depending on location — which is still decent value, but our homemade version works out even cheaper per bake when you make a batch.
Fun fact: Greggs serves over 6 million customers a week across the UK. The Steak Bake has been on the menu since the 1980s and remains one of their top five best-selling products to this day.
Check out the Greggs Chicken Bake Recipe
Ingredients (Makes 4 Steak Bakes)
I’ve kept this as close to the Greggs original as I can. The list might look a bit long at first glance, but most of these are everyday items you’ve probably got in the cupboard already. Let me walk you through each part.
For the Filling
| Ingredient | Amount | Notes | Shop From |
|---|---|---|---|
| Braising steak / chuck steak | 300 g | Diced into 1 cm cubes — this cut is perfect for a rich, tender filling | Morrisons Aldi |
| Brown onion | 1 medium | Finely diced — goes soft and sweet when cooked down | Any supermarket |
| Beef stock cube or pot | 1 cube / 1 pot | Knorr or Oxo work great; Knorr Stock Pots are richer | Tesco Waitrose |
| Plain flour | 2 tbsp | To thicken the gravy inside the bake | Any supermarket |
| Worcestershire sauce | 1 tbsp | Lea & Perrins — this is the key flavour depth ingredient! | Sainsbury’s |
| Tomato purée | 1 tsp | Just a touch for richness and colour | Any supermarket |
| Beef dripping or vegetable oil | 1 tbsp | Beef dripping gives it that authentic bakery richness — find it at Asda | Asda |
| Boiling water | 250 ml | To make the gravy stock | — |
| Salt & black pepper | To taste | Be generous with the pepper — the filling should be quite peppery! | Any supermarket |
| Garlic powder (optional) | ½ tsp | Not in the Greggs original, but adds a subtle depth | Any supermarket |
For the Pastry
| Ingredient | Amount | Notes | Shop From |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ready-rolled puff pastry | 2 × 320 g sheets | Jus-Rol or own-brand — both are excellent. Get the all-butter version if you can! | Sainsbury’s Lidl |
| Egg | 1 large | For the egg wash — gives that shiny golden top | Any supermarket |
| Splash of milk | 1 tsp | Mix into the egg for the wash — makes it smoother | — |
Check out the Bake-Off Ovens used in Greggs’ Kitchen
Where to Buy Your Ingredients in the UK
Getting the right ingredients from the right places genuinely makes a difference. Here’s my honest, practical guide to sourcing each key component across the UK in 2026.
Greggs Steak Bake Homemade Recipe UK 2026 — Your UK supermarket sourcing guide at a glance
🥩 The Beef — The Most Important Ingredient
You want braising steak or chuck steak here. Don’t be tempted by stewing steak (too tough) or sirloin (too expensive and it dries out). Braising steak has just enough fat to stay juicy and flavourful during cooking.
- Morrisons — Their Market Street butcher counter often has it loose, which is fresher. Ask them to dice it for you if they will!
- Aldi / Lidl — Surprisingly good quality for the price. Their braising steak packs (usually ~500g) work well for a double batch.
- Tesco / Sainsbury’s — Reliable and consistent. Watch for yellow-sticker reduced packs in the evening.
- Local butcher — If you have one nearby, this is honestly the best option. Cheaper per kilo than supermarkets, better quality, and they’ll dice it for you.
🥐 The Pastry — Don’t Make Life Harder Than It Needs to Be
I know some people say you should make your own puff pastry. And yes, homemade is incredible. But proper puff pastry takes hours and serious technique. Ready-rolled all-butter puff pastry from a supermarket is genuinely excellent, and it’s what I use every time.
Best picks: Jus-Rol All-Butter Ready Rolled Puff Pastry (Tesco/Sainsbury’s ~£2.50) or Lidl’s own-brand (~£1.20). Both bake up beautifully flaky. The all-butter version genuinely tastes noticeably better — worth the small extra cost.
🧅 Onion, Stock & Flavourings
Honestly, grab these from wherever is convenient. The key flavour difference-maker is the Worcestershire sauce — use Lea & Perrins. I’ve tried supermarket own-brands and while they’re fine, the original just has a more complex tang that really lifts the filling. A big bottle lasts ages anyway, so it’s worth it.
For the stock, Knorr Stock Pots (the little gel pots) give a richer, deeper flavour than regular cube stocks. If you’ve got any leftover beef stock from a previous roast in the freezer, even better — use that!
Check out the Commercial Refrigeration used at Greggs
How to Make Your Greggs Steak Bake
Right, let’s get into it. I’ll walk you through every step clearly. Take your time with the filling — it needs to be properly cooked and thickened before it goes anywhere near the pastry, otherwise you’ll end up with a soggy bottom (very unGreggs).
Greggs Steak Bake Homemade Recipe UK 2026 — The 4 key stages of making your steak bake
Preheat Your Oven & Get Everything Ready
Set your oven to 200°C / 180°C fan / Gas Mark 6. Line a large baking tray (or two) with baking parchment. Take your ready-rolled pastry sheets out of the fridge and let them sit on the counter for 10 minutes — cold pastry cracks when you try to cut it.
Dice your beef into roughly 1 cm cubes. Finely dice your onion. Have your stock cube/pot, flour, Worcestershire sauce, and tomato purée measured out and ready to go beside the hob.
💡 My tip: Dry the beef cubes with a bit of kitchen roll before browning. Wet meat steams instead of browning, and you’ll miss out on that lovely golden crust that adds flavour to the gravy.Brown the Beef & Soften the Onion
Heat your tablespoon of beef dripping or oil in a wide, heavy-based pan (a cast iron pan is ideal) over a high heat. Once it’s properly hot and just starting to smoke, add your beef cubes in a single layer. Don’t crowd them — do this in two batches if needed.
Let them sit for 2 minutes without stirring. You want a deep brown crust forming. Then turn them and give the other sides a quick brown too. This whole process takes about 4–5 minutes. Transfer the beef to a plate and set aside.
Turn the heat down to medium. In the same pan (don’t wash it — you want all those browned bits), add the diced onion. Cook for 5–6 minutes, stirring occasionally, until it’s softened and turning golden at the edges.
💡 My tip: Those dark, caramelised bits stuck to the bottom of the pan? They’re called “fond” and they’re basically flavour gold. When you add liquid later, they’ll dissolve into your gravy and make it taste incredible.Build the Gravy Filling
Return the browned beef to the pan with the onions. Stir in the 2 tablespoons of plain flour and cook for 1–2 minutes, stirring constantly. The flour will coat everything and the pan might look a bit dry and pasty — that’s perfect.
Now add your tomato purée and stir in. Then pour in 250 ml of hot water with your stock cube/pot dissolved in it. Add the Worcestershire sauce, a good amount of black pepper, and salt to taste.
Bring everything to a gentle simmer and cook for 10–12 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the gravy has thickened up and coats the beef nicely. You’re looking for a consistency thicker than gravy you’d pour on a roast — it needs to hold itself inside the pastry.
Taste the filling and adjust seasoning. Should be rich, peppery, and deeply savoury. Let it cook a little longer if the gravy is still too thin.
💡 My tip: The filling must be properly thick before you cool it. When it’s hot it always looks thicker than it is — once cooled, it should be the texture of a thick beef stew. If in doubt, cook it longer.Cool the Filling Completely
This step is non-negotiable. Transfer the filling to a bowl or spread it on a plate and let it cool to room temperature — or better yet, pop it in the fridge for 20–30 minutes. If you add hot filling to pastry, the butter in the pastry will melt before it even hits the oven, and you’ll end up with flat, greasy bakes instead of light, flaky ones.
💡 My tip: If you’re in a rush, spread the filling on a large plate to maximise surface area — it cools twice as fast. I’ve also been known to put it outside on a cold British day, which speeds things up no end!Cut Your Pastry Rectangles
Unroll your puff pastry sheets on a lightly floured surface. Using a sharp knife or pizza cutter, cut each sheet into 4 equal rectangles — you’ll have 8 rectangles in total from 2 sheets (4 bases + 4 lids).
Try to keep all the rectangles roughly the same size — approximately 14 cm × 10 cm works well. Use a ruler if you like neat edges (I do — no shame in that).
💡 My tip: Don’t stretch the pastry when you move it onto the baking tray. Stretched pastry shrinks back when baked and you end up with thick, chunky edges and thin centres. Lift it gently.Assemble the Steak Bakes
Place 4 of your pastry rectangles on the lined baking tray, spacing them well apart. Spoon a generous amount of cooled filling (about 3–4 heaped tablespoons) into the centre of each base, leaving a 1.5 cm border all the way around — this is where you’ll seal the edges.
Beat your egg with a teaspoon of milk to make the egg wash. Brush the border area of each base with egg wash using a pastry brush (or your fingertip works in a pinch).
Lay the 4 “lid” rectangles on top. Press the edges firmly together with your fingertips, then use a fork to crimp all the way around. This seals them and gives you that classic bake edge pattern.
Using a sharp knife, make 2–3 small slits in the top of each bake. This lets steam escape and stops your bakes from going soggy from the inside.
💡 My tip: Don’t be stingy with the filling! These bakes should feel generously stuffed. The pastry shrinks slightly as it bakes, so what looks overfull now will look just right when it comes out.Egg Wash & Bake to Golden Perfection
Brush the tops of each bake generously with your remaining egg wash. Make sure you get right to the crimped edges — this is what gives you that gorgeous deep golden colour all over.
Place in your preheated oven on the middle shelf and bake for 22–25 minutes, until deeply golden brown and the pastry has puffed up beautifully. Check at 20 minutes — all ovens run slightly differently, and you don’t want them going too dark.
Remove from the oven and let them rest on the tray for at least 5 minutes before eating. I know, I know — the wait is agony. But the filling will be absolutely molten straight out of the oven, so please wait. Your mouth will thank you.
💡 My tip: If the bottoms look pale when you check them, move the tray to the lower shelf for the last 5 minutes. A crisp bottom is essential — nobody wants a soggy-bottomed steak bake!
Check out the Coffee Machines used at Greggs
Greggs Steak Bake Homemade Recipe UK 2026 — Three perfect steak bakes fresh from the oven
Check out Greggs v/s Pret Meal Deal
Full Cooking Timeline
Here’s the complete timeline from start to first bite, so you can plan your time properly:
Check out the High Protein Diet options at Greggs
Nutrition Information
I know people ask about nutrition, so here’s an honest breakdown. These are estimates — your exact numbers will vary depending on the pastry brand you use and how much filling you pack in. I’ve compared my homemade version against the official Greggs figures too.
| Nutrient | Homemade (per bake) | Greggs Official (per bake) | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Calories (kcal) | ~480 | ~408 | +72 kcal |
| Fat (g) | ~28 | ~23.2 | +4.8g |
| of which saturates (g) | ~13 | ~10.6 | +2.4g |
| Carbohydrates (g) | ~38 | ~35.3 | +2.7g |
| of which sugars (g) | ~3 | ~2.9 | ~same |
| Fibre (g) | ~2.2 | ~1.9 | +0.3g |
| Protein (g) | ~20 | ~14.3 | +5.7g ✅ |
| Salt (g) | ~1.4 | ~1.6 | −0.2g ✅ |
The homemade version has slightly more calories and fat (mostly because all-butter pastry is richer), but it also has significantly more protein (+5.7g) because we use proper diced beef rather than the more processed filling Greggs uses. Less salt too! Overall, it’s a reasonable trade-off for homemade comfort food.
Macronutrient Breakdown — Homemade Version
Calorie Comparison — Homemade vs Shop-Bought
Check out Greggs Discounts Deals 2026
Cost Breakdown — How Much Does It Really Cost?
One of the best things about making these at home is the cost. Here’s what a batch of 4 steak bakes costs me when I shop at mid-range UK supermarkets (Tesco/Morrisons prices, 2026):
Price Per Bake — Homemade vs High Street
You save roughly 30–45% vs buying from Greggs — and significantly more vs a petrol station pasty! Over a year of making 2 batches a month, that’s easily £80–£120 saved while eating something fresher and more satisfying.
Check out Greggs Savoury Mince Pie
My Top 8 Pro Tips for the Perfect Steak Bake
1. 🔥 Get the Pan Screaming Hot
You need real high heat for the beef. If it sizzles the moment it hits the pan, you’re on track. If it just kind of sits there making quiet noises, the pan isn’t hot enough — wait longer.
2. ❄️ Cool Filling is Non-Negotiable
Hot filling = melted butter in pastry = flat, greasy bakes. Never skip this step. I sometimes make the filling the night before and refrigerate it — works brilliantly.
3. 🥄 Don’t Overfill
Leave that 1.5 cm border clear! Too much filling and your seal won’t hold, filling leaks everywhere, and the bottom goes soggy. Generous but controlled is the goal.
4. 🥐 Keep Pastry Cold
If at any point during assembly the pastry starts to feel soft and greasy, put the assembled bakes in the fridge for 15 minutes before baking. Cold pastry = better rise.
5. 🥚 Double Egg Wash
For an extra glossy, deep golden top, egg wash them before baking, then carefully add a second coat after 10 minutes in the oven. Game changer for colour.
6. 🌡️ Use the Right Shelf
Middle shelf for even baking. If the tops brown too quickly, loosely tent with foil. If the bottoms need more colour, move to the lower shelf for the final 5 minutes.
7. 🔪 Sharp Knife for the Slits
Make your steam vents with a confident slash — don’t drag or saw the knife, otherwise you’ll pull the pastry and mess up your seal. One firm cut per slit.
8. 🧊 Freeze Before Baking
Assembled (unbaked) steak bakes freeze brilliantly! Freeze on a tray, then bag up. Bake from frozen at 200°C for 35–40 minutes. Perfect meal prep!
Check out the new summer drinks 2026 at Greggs
Variations & Substitutions
| Variation | What to Change | My Rating |
|---|---|---|
| Mushroom Boost | Add 100g chestnut mushrooms (diced & fried first) to the filling alongside the beef | ★★★★★ |
| Cheesy Steak Bake | Add 2 tbsp of grated mature cheddar to the filling just before cooling — melts beautifully inside | ★★★★★ |
| Vegetarian Version | Replace beef with 300g of diced portobello mushrooms + 1 tin of brown lentils, use vegetable stock | ★★★★★ |
| Spicy Kick | Add ½ tsp chilli flakes and 1 tsp smoked paprika to the filling when adding the stock | ★★★★★ |
| Shortcrust Pastry | Use shortcrust instead of puff for a denser, more traditional pasty texture | ★★★★★ |
| Guinness Filling | Replace half the stock water with Guinness stout for a deeper, richer gravy | ★★★★★ |
| Mini Party Bakes | Cut pastry into smaller 8×6 cm rectangles — makes 8–10 bite-size steak bakes. Reduce bake time to 15–18 min | ★★★★★ |
Our household favourite: The Guinness & mushroom combo. Replace half the water with Guinness and add fried chestnut mushrooms. The depth of flavour is absolutely extraordinary — honestly, it’s better than the original.
Check out the Heated Display Cabinets used at Greggs
How to Store Your Steak Bakes
🥡 Room Temperature
Freshly baked steak bakes can sit at room temperature for up to 2 hours. After that, pop them in the fridge.
❄️ Fridge
Store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days. Reheat in the oven at 180°C for 12–15 minutes for best results.
🧊 Freezer (Baked)
Freeze baked steak bakes for up to 2 months. Reheat from frozen at 180°C for 20–25 minutes. Brilliant for batch cooking.
🧊 Freezer (Unbaked)
Assembled but unbaked — freeze for up to 3 months. Bake straight from frozen at 200°C for 35–40 minutes. Best option overall!
Avoid the microwave if you can! Reheating in a microwave makes the pastry soft and a bit sad. The oven (or even an air fryer at 180°C for 8 minutes) keeps it beautifully crisp. Worth the extra wait.
Also, Check out the Mixers & Dough Plants used at Greggs
Frequently Asked Questions
Here are the questions I get asked most often about this recipe — answered honestly from experience!
Check out Greggs Summer Menu 2026
Greggs Steak Bake — Quick Reference Card
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Yield | 4 Steak Bakes |
| Prep Time | 30 minutes |
| Cook Time | 25 minutes (plus 20 min cooling) |
| Oven Temp | 200°C / 180°C fan / Gas 6 |
| Cost Per Bake | £1.20–£2.00 depending on where you shop |
| Difficulty | Easy–Medium ★★★☆☆ |
| Best Eaten | Fresh from the oven with HP sauce |
| Freezer Friendly | Yes — baked or unbaked |
| Vegetarian Option | Yes — see variations section |




One Comment