Boeuf à la Bourguignonne recipe (beef Bourguignonne) (2024)

So much more than a fancy stew, boeuf à la Bourguignonne is a dish that’s quintessentially French.

Jul 29, 2021 6:00am

By Damien Pignolet

  • 30 mins preparation
  • 1 hr 20 mins cooking plus marinating, chilling
  • Serves 6
  • Boeuf à la Bourguignonne recipe (beef Bourguignonne) (1)

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Great red Burgundies have refined fruitiness and delicate but complex bouquets, so it's no wonder so many famous dishes in the French repertoire come from this province: jambon persillé, coq au vin, gougères, and not least of all beef Bourguignon or boeuf à la Bourguignonne.

Both red and white wines play a major role in Burgundian cuisine. It may be as simple as adding red wine to the pan after cooking a minute steak, reducing it with shallots and beef jus, then mounting it with butter and adding parsley for a quick sauce. Coq au vin, by contrast, is a more complex dish. Fortunately, boeuf à la Bourguignonne (or "Bourguignonne" as was the bistro title of old) is relatively simple but, like all things simple, the art is in the detail.

You need to start this gorgeous dish well ahead. It's worth making your own rich stock, which is reduced to a veal glace, or glaze.

Ask your butcher to saw a veal shank into sections and order meaty beef bones. Roast these, then make a stock with them along with onions, carrots, celery and a bouquet garni. Cook the stock for at least eight hours (up to 14 if practicable), then strain and skim off fat, and reduce it to 20 per cent of the original quantity. Any leftover stock may be frozen for another use.

Traditional recipes call for topside or even rump steak, both of which I consider give a rather dry result (early recipes require larding the meat, when a joint is used: making incisions and inserting lardons). Chuck steak is an excellent cut to use, as is gravy beef, which produces a rich sauce (hence the name). I love oyster blade since it's a single muscle, which translates to even cooking. Another helper is the built-in treasure of a gelatinous fibre of collagen running through its centre, which adds to the body of the sauce provided the cooking is slow enough to break it down. (Most cooks think this cut is only for braising but it makes a great steak if cooked medium rare, and a very succulent roast.)

Burgundians often use diced beef for this dish since it's essentially a stew. I used to dice this cut until it occurred to me to braise it in slices, allowing even cooking and attractive presentation. Cook the slices in one layer for even heat distribution and a succulent result.

The principal ingredients are simple: good aged beef, a few root vegetables, pork belly and a good Burgundy. While Australian pinot noir will make a fine Bourguignonne, try to use a French wine. I used a 2012 Joseph Faiveley Bourgogne, which compares favourably in price to a homeland pinot noir.

Note that the sauce may seem thin but, provided the flavour is rich, there's no need to reduce it. And take care to find tiny onions and mushrooms since they add so much to the presentation.

A great advantage of this recipe is that it may be cooked in advance, leaving the final garnish for the day you serve it. As to an accompaniment, I prefer little waxy potatoes such as kipflers or chats, rather than a potato purée - this will negate all the care taken to make a pure-tasting sauce. And, as with many French dishes, don't forget the parsley.

Boeuf à la Bourguignonne is the sort of dish we dream about as real French food. Savour it with a delicious Burgundy. Enjoy.

The recipe

30 minute preparation | 1 hr 20 mins cooking plus marinating, chilling
Serves 6
Begin this recipe two days ahead to marinate the meat.

Ingredients

  • 24 tiny champignons (such as Swiss browns)
  • 6 pieces beef oyster blade (240gm each trimmed weight), preferably grass fed (see note)
  • 170 ml olive oil
  • 50 ml Cognac or brandy
  • 2 onions, peeled and coarsely chopped
  • 2 carrots, peeled and coarsely chopped
  • 1 fresh bouquet garni of 4 thyme sprigs, 6 parsley stalks and 1 fresh bay leaf
  • 150 ml veal glace (see note)
  • 300 gm boneless pickled pork belly, cut into 8mm lardons
  • 100 ml clarified butter
  • 12-18 smallest pickling onions, peeled and pierced through their centres with a paring knife
  • ¾ cup finely chopped curly-leaf parsley

Red Burgundy marinade

  • 750 ml red Burgundy or other pinot noir
  • 6 thyme sprigs
  • 6 parsley stalks
  • 2 fresh bay leaves
  • 2 garlic cloves, unpeeled, smashed

Method

Main

  • 1

    Remove stalks from mushrooms and place in a sealable non-reactive container with marinade ingredients and beef (reserve mushrooms), cover and refrigerate overnight to marinate.

  • 2

    Remove beef from marinade and pat dry thoroughly with paper towels, then set aside to come to room temperature (chilled meat will not brown easily without shedding its juices).

  • 3

    Meanwhile, strain the marinade through a sieve lined with muslin or filter paper and set aside.

  • 4

    Heat 60ml oil in a frying pan over medium heat and brown meat well all over, watching the heat so caramelisation occurs slowly (5-6 minutes). Remove the meat and wipe out pan with paper towels, then return meat to pan. Away from the heat source, add Cognac, return to very low heat, shake pan and allow to boil for 20-30 seconds (take care – the spirit may catch alight over a gas flame, which is desirable but can set off smoke alarms). Turn the beef over and set aside.

  • 5

    Preheat oven to 160C. Wipe out pan again, add 60ml oil and heat over medium-high heat. Add chopped onions and carrots and cook, stirring occasionally, until lightly coloured (7-8 minutes). Drain off the fat and pat the vegetables dry with paper towels. Place a piece of muslin in the bottom of a heatproof casserole that will neatly hold the meat in a single layer, add vegetables and bouquet garni, wrap into a bundle and secure with kitchen string.

  • 6

    Strain any juices left from browning the beef and add to pan along with veal glace, bring slowly to the boil over low heat and skim until clear - add water if necessary to keep the braising liquor only just covering the contents. Taste to check the seasoning; it will taste acidic and bland but don't oversalt. Press a sheet of baking paper cut to fit the casserole directly on the surface and transfer to the oven. After 20 minutes reduce oven to 130C and continue cooking until meat holds just a tiny bit of resistance when pierced with a skewer (55-60 minutes). Place meat in a bowl and press a sheet of baking paper on the surface to prevent beef drying out. Transfer the bag of vegetables to a sieve placed over the braising pan and press the bag to release the juices, then place over low heat on the stovetop and simmer gently while skimming off as much fat as possible until broth looks fairly clear (4-5 minutes). Filter the braising liquor through a sieve lined with moistened muslin into a bowl placed over a larger one holding ice cubes and a small handful of salt so that it cools quickly. Stir from time to time and once cool, pour this over the beef. Cover and refrigerate for at least 6 hours. Once liquid is really cold, spoon off any remaining fat.

  • 7

    About an hour before serving, very slowly reheat your Bourguignonne on the stovetop. Heat remaining oil in a frying pan over medium-high heat, add lardons and fry, stirring occasionally, until golden brown (2-3 minutes). Place lardons on paper towels, discard butter and wipe out pan.

  • 8

    Heat half the clarified butter over medium-high heat and sauté champignons until they look glazed (5-6 minutes). Place the champignons on paper towels, discard butter and wipe out pan.

  • 9

    Heat remaining clarified butter and sauté pickling onions, keeping the pan on the move so onions roll in the hot butter to gain some colour (10-15 minutes). Drain on paper towels. Add lardons, mushrooms and onions to Bourguignonne and simmer until onions are cooked through (10-15 minutes; the sauce won't be thickened but will taste delicious). Serve in deep dishes with an equal share of the vegetables and lardons and scatter generously with parsley. Accompany with small boiled kipfler or chat potatoes.

Notes

Note Instead of oyster blade, you can use boned, trimmed short rib or chuck steak. The former may be portioned like the oyster blade and will take 2-2½ hours to cook. The chuck should be diced in 2.5cm-3cm pieces and will take a similar time. Veal glace is a highly reduced veal stock. Boil 750ml good low-salt veal stock over medium-high heat until reduced to 150ml.

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Boeuf à la Bourguignonne recipe (beef Bourguignonne) (2024)

FAQs

What is the best cut of beef to make beef bourguignon? ›

What Is the Best Meat to Use for Beef Bourguignon? Beef bourguignon typically features both pork—in the form of lardons, small strips of fatty, thick-cut bacon—and stewing beef, usually beef chuck diced into 2-inch cubes, though any lean cut (like brisket) is acceptable.

Should beef bourguignon be thick or thin? ›

Stews like boeuf bourguignon should ideally be thick and glossy enough that the liquid coats the back of a spoon, a process aided by collagen-rich cuts of meat and a long, slow simmer.

What is le boeuf bourguignon? ›

jɒ̃/; French: [bœf buʁɡiɲɔ̃]), also called beef Burgundy, and bœuf à la Bourguignonne, is a French beef stew braised in red wine, often red Burgundy, and beef stock, typically flavored with carrots, onions, garlic, and a bouquet garni, and garnished with pearl onions, mushrooms, and bacon.

What is the best French red for beef bourguignon? ›

Red Burgundy is the traditional match for Beef Bourguignon, Merlot dominated blends from both Australia and Bordeaux. Red Bordeaux in particular, can be enjoyed more fully. A weighty Pinot Noir or a robust Ribera del Duero. Tempranillo wine is also fine.

Do you serve Beef Bourguignon in bowl or plate? ›

I like to ladle portion of the Beef Bourguignon into a shallow dish ( I love my Le Creuset Pasta bowls for this)then top with a few potatoes before spooning more Beef Bourguignon over the top for more sauce. The sauce is sooo good! Top with a small pinch of French Sea Salt.

What's the difference between Beef Bourguignon and beef stew? ›

The main difference is that beef bourguignon uses a full bottle of red wine for the sauce, whereas beef stew calls for little to no wine. Additionally, beef bourguignon also typically includes bacon, pearl onions, and mushrooms.

Can you overcook beef bourguignon? ›

Can you overcook beef bourguignon? Although this is a sturdy dish that can withstand hours of cooking, depending on the cut and size of the meat pieces, it is possible to overcook it as all the melting fat renders out of the meat, leaving it quite dry to bite into.

How do you tenderize beef for beef bourguignon? ›

Red Wine. In cooking, Bourguignon means “cooked in red wine,” which is what we're doing in this recipe. It intensifies the flavor and helps tenderize the beef during cooking. A dry red wine is best.

How do I thicken up my beef bourguignon? ›

The traditional thickener is beurre manié (French for kneaded butter), which consists of equal parts butter and flour blended (kneaded) together. For the amount of stock used in this recipe, you would probably need a couple of tablespoons each of flour and butter.

Is beef bourguignon better the next day? ›

As with all beef stews, this one is best made a day or two ahead; don't sauté the mushrooms and onions until just before serving. This recipe is part of The New Essentials of French Cooking, a guide to definitive dishes every modern cook should master.

What is an interesting fact about beef bourguignon? ›

Beef Bourguignon was first mentioned in cookbooks in 1903, by chef Auguste Escoffier; it was later refined into the staple haute cuisine dish it's generally regarded as today. Most people associate this dish with Julia Child, as her recipe in Mastering the Art of French Cooking is a timeless work of art.

What is special about boeuf bourguignon? ›

The dish originates from Burgundy and combines two of the region's top products: red wine and Charolais beef. The white cattle, famous for their gentle temperament as well as tender meat, hail from the Charolles region of southern Burgundy and offer the perfect complement to the area's rich red wine.

What do you eat with beef bourguignon? ›

It's Bœuf bourguignon. In a multi-course menu, it often stands alone as the main dish, accompanied just with baguette. Cooked homestyle, it is often served with egg noodles (in French: pâtes), potatoes or simply garlic bread.

What wine is best for making Bourguignon? ›

Pinot Noir is the traditional wine used in Beef Bourguignon. It's the red wine that the Burgundy region of France is most famous for, reflecting the origins of this dish which is also known as “Beef Burgundy”. There's no need to splurge on expensive wine here.

What can I use instead of red wine in beef bourguignon? ›

If you're seeking a substitute for red wine, consider replacing one-for-one with:
  • Alcohol-free red wine.
  • Beef broth.
  • Chicken broth.
  • Red wine vinegar (use ½ vinegar and ½ water for similar flavor results)
  • Cranberry juice*
  • Pomegranate juice*
Aug 8, 2023

What cut of beef is the most tender for beef stew? ›

Next time you're shopping for stew beef, look at your options and see what cuts of meat will work best for your recipe. For example, chuck is a lean and tender cut of beef that works well in stew. However, if you would prefer a thicker and more flavorful stew, short ribs or oxtail may be better choices for you.

Is Merlot or Cabernet better for beef stew? ›

Most people agree that cabernet sauvignon is the way to go if you need a red wine to pair with beef stew. With that dry taste thanks to all those tannins, which in turn bring out the flavor of the beef, it won't get overwhelmed if you've have a really hearty stew full of meat and veggies.

What is the best piece of meat for beef stew? ›

Go for the chuck

The most common beef used for stew is chuck steak, also known as gravy beef or braising steak. Beef chuck comes from the forequarter of the animal consisting of parts of the neck, shoulder blade and upper arm. It is easy to find and it's affordable, making it a great choice for your stew.

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