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by: Max M Rasmussen
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public

Beef Burgundy - Boeuf Bourguignon

A little beef a little burgundy - Max M Rasmussen
Video Recipe - A real autumn and winter classic. You have to start early, but most of the time spent is only simmering, and it takes care of itself. A stew is good basic recipe to have in your arsenal for all those "cheap" beef cuts. It may look complicated, and has quite a list of ingredients, but you use a lot of classic techniques, so this is one of those dishes you become a better cook by, and it is easy to vary.

Ingredients

meat

  • 200 g (7 oz) smoked bacon
  • ghee, oil or butter for browning
  • 1.5 kg (3 lbs) coarse beef (loin, shoulder, osso buco, etc.).
  • flour

vegetables

  • 4 onions
  • 2 cloves of garlic
  • 2 carrots
  • 1 leek

sauce

  • 1 bottle of Bourgogne/Burgundy red wine
  • 1 bunch parsley, thyme, bay leaf (bouquet garni)

added just before serving

  • 250 g (9 oz) mushrooms
  • lemon juice or vinegar to taste
  • salt & pepper
  • 20 pearl onions, shallots or other small onion
  • a little sugar
Did I mention that there is quite a lot of ingredients? - Max M Rasmussen

Directions

Preparation

Cut the bacon into ½ to 1 cm (1/4 to 1/2 inch) cubes.

Cut the meat into 3-4 cm (2 inch) cubes.

Cut the onions into medium-sized cubes.

Cut the leeks up length wise to open them up. Cut them to a length of 5 cm (2 inches) and clean them well to remove any sand.

Peel the carrots and cut into approximately 5 cm long pieces.
Browning

Fry the bacon slightly crispy. Add a little oil and butter to the pan if necessary.

Turn the pieces of meat in flour and fry them in fat. Only a few at a time. If there is liquid in the pan, it is not hot enough or there is too much meat. If the pan runs dry you should just add more butter/oil. They should be well browned on every side. This is what makes most of the flavour. Set each batch aside as they are finished.

Fry the vegetables golden in butter/oil.

Pour the wine into the pan with the vegetables, but save approximately 1 dl (½ cup) to glaze the onions later. Boil the wine for a few minutes so the alcohol evaporates.

Put bacon and meat on top of the vegetabeles and wine.

Simmer with the lid on for 1½ to 2½ hours. You should be able to cut the meat with a spoon. Or at least it should be very tender:-S

Before Serving - The Mushrooms

Clean the mushrooms. Cut them into quarters or halves, so you get roughly equal sized pieces.

Fry until golden on your frying pan in the oil/butter.

Season with salt, pepper and a little lemon or vinegar.

Before Serving - The Onions

Clean them and remove the peel.

Fry them all in a little oil/butter. With 1 teaspoon sugar.

Add the last of the red wine and let it boil along with the onions.

Fry until the onions are translucent and golden. Add a splash of water if the wine boils away before they are finished.

Just before serving

Add the onion and mushrooms to the meat. Cook them just until they are hot.

Notes

The funny thing with this recipe is that it seems like a "simple stew", but actually it is using a lot of different super-classic French principles to get it right.

Onion, carrot and leeks are often basic flavors in soups and stews. Celery instead of leeks would have been more common. But not in this recipe.

Basically, the dish is a simply braise. It is browned meat with flour and vegetables to give it some flavor. Then you just simmer it for some hours to make it tender.

The browned flour thickener the sauce a bit, so it is very thin. But it should not be to thick. It has to be somewhat runny for the classic version.

Some of the hardy vegetables are boiled along with the meat so you extract all the flavor. The last vegetables you just warm up just so they keep a bit of their bite. This is also a classic technique.

The wine brings the complexity, sweetnes and acidity at the same time. A simple trick you can use in most dishes. Often, however you use something else along with the wine. Especially here in Denmark it is an expensive sauce due to taxes :-S

However, it does not need to be a burgundy wine. I used a medium-priced wine from Alsace made of the  Pinot Noir grape, which is the same as the one in burgundy. But I don't call it "Boef Alsace" because of that.

Glazing vegetables like onions and carrots is also a classic technique. You can actually serve them separately if you want, for many dishes. The same goes for the mushrooms.

You can make exactly the same recipe with different types of meat. With a soup rooster or thighs, you end up having "coq au vin", which is basically the same dish. Course pieces of pork or leg of lamb lamb gives an excellent result too.

Very close to that beef. - Max M Rasmussen