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How To Make Beef Wellington

This is the dish James Bond* would serve if he were hosting a dinner party. It’s manly and rich, and takes a little skill to pull off really well. It was also incredibly popular in the 60s.

I’ll probably get plenty of angry comments telling me this version is a travesty, that it’s using the wrong cut of beef, that it can’t be done properly as quickly as I did. Right on all counts … except that it tasted damn good. And I still say that beats tradition every time.

* Sean Connery. No question.

Ingredients


2 beef tenderloin fillets, 4 ounces each (see note below)
1/2 pound portabella mushrooms
1/2 medium red onion
1 cup sweet white wine
1 cup flour
6 tablespoons butter, well chilled (nearly frozen)
1/4 cup ice water (approximately)
one egg (not pictured, see below)
salt and pepper

Directions

The beef

I didn’t plan ahead like I should have. I decided Friday night that I wanted to make this. When I went to the butcher on Saturday, they didn’t have any tenderloin. Oops.

So I got the next best thing, some New Your strips, 12 ounces each. I cut the four pieces that I was going to need for dinner and froze the last piece for later. Normally I’d leave the fat, but I thought there was a little too much to cook into a pastry so I trimmed it.

Season them on one side with salt and pepper.

Melt a couple of tablespoons of bacon fat in an uncoated pan over extremely high heat. I had the pieces of fat I trimmed from the steak, so I added that, too.

As soon as the fat is melted, place the beef seasoned side down in the pan. Be careful of splattering grease. Season the other side.

Turn the beef over as soon as it is browned. To check, shake the pan. When it is browned, the beef will break loose from the surface and slide around freely. It should take a minute or less on high.

Once the top and bottom are done, brown the sides. You might have to get in there with tongs and hold the beef upright.

When the beef is browned all the way around, remove it to a plate or cutting board … something big enough to hold all the beef in one layer. Wrap tightly with plastic wrap.

Put the wrapped beef in the freezer while you prep the other ingredients. You’ll want the beef to be barely rare when the pastry is finished, so it should be nearly frozen when it goes into the oven.

The filling

Clean and slice the mushrooms, then dice them fine.

Add the wine to the same pan you cooked the beef in. Deglaze the pan over medium heat, scraping up all the brown bits, that’s pure flavor.

Add the chopped mushrooms. Stir occasionally until the liquid is reduced.

The mushrooms will give up their moisture as they cook, so the liquid will actually increase before it starts to reduce.

Shred the onion, then dice the shreds.

Once the liquid in the mushrooms is completely cooked down, add the onions. Keep stirring until the onions are soft and browned, then remove from heat.


The pastry

Put the flour and salt in a bowl.

Dice the butter into small pieces. Add it to the flour and cut in with a pastry cutter or two knives until the pieces are smaller than pea-sized.

Add ice water a tablespoon at a time and stir with a fork. You want just enough water for the flour to hold together as a coarse meal.

Turn the dough out onto a floured surface and roll it out into a square an eighth-inch (a half centimeter) thick.

Once it’s rolled out, make sure it is not stuck to the counter. If it is, scrape it up, flour the surface and roll it out again. Then cut it in half with a pizza slicer or a sharp knife.


The assembly (finally)

Pre-heat the oven to 400°. Remove the fillets from the freezer. Add a layer of the mushroom mixture as big as the fillets to each piece of dough, then place the fillets on top of the filling.

Wrap the dough around the beef and pinch the edges together.

It would be better to seal the edges with an egg wash — one egg yolk beaten with one tablespoon of water. Somehow I was out of eggs. I always have eggs, so I didn’t think to check. Brush the top with the remaining egg wash.

Put the finished, sealed packages on an un-greased baking sheet. There is more than enough butter in the crust to keep it from sticking.

Bake for about 20 minutes, until the pastry is golden brown.


Presentation

Let the beef rest for five minutes, then slice in half. Plate each one with one half leaning on top of the other.

Add the remaining mushroom mixture.

Serve with a light side, like grilled asparagus or glazed carrots. I did raw vegetables: red pepper with ranch dip, and tomato with extra virgin olive oil and balsamic vinegar.

And that’s it.


This is one of the longest recipes I’ve done, but none of the steps are really that hard. I would recommend practicing the pastry by making a pie crust or two so you get used to handling it.

And don’t try to rush this one. Give yourself plenty of lead time. You can leave the beef in the freezer for an hour or so before baking, so take your time getting the dough right. Good luck with it.

PS: There was a problem when Blogger posted this the first time. I accidentally lost a couple of comments when I fixed it. From Kristin:

Oh, but I MUST question, Drew, because I’ve always been partial to Roger Moore.

But all Bond preferences aside, this IS an impressive recipe, isn’t it? I would never make it, but I wouldn’t mind if someone else made it for me.

And from Merryann:

Hmmmm….never thought about making individual Wellingtons! Good idea!

One note to make it even easier (from a professional chef friend of mine) – skip making the pastry and use puff pastry sheets.

I saw several recipes calling for puff pastry, including one that described how to make it. Several hours for the pastry before I even start on the beef? Not today, thanks. But more than half showed this type of simple butter crust. Since I’ve done several pie crusts, I figured I’d just go do-it-yourself for the whole thing.


Want more like this? For more recipes like this, that you can hold right in your hands, and write on, take notes, tear pages out if you want (Gosh, you're tough on books, aren't you?) you might be interested in How To Cook Like Your Grandmother, 2nd edition, Illustrated. Or to learn your way around the kitchen, check out Starting From Scratch: The Owner's Manual for Your Kitchen.

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10 Comments

  1. Dawn from Lakeland FL
    Posted October 8, 2008 at 10:05 am | Permalink

    I agree with you on the choice of who played James Bond, Sean Connery is the quintessential James Bond. I also would like to see a print recipe button on your blog. It is much to long to print out with all the pictures but they do help in understanding the steps.

  2. Bob
    Posted October 8, 2008 at 10:17 am | Permalink

    I totally agree, taste trumps tradition. Those looks amazing, although I would personally sub something else (maybe bacon?) for the mushrooms. And Mr Connery was the best Bond, hands down.

  3. Kristin
    Posted October 8, 2008 at 12:39 pm | Permalink

    Okay, so I KNOW I posted a comment early this morning, but the Internet ate it.

    Anyway, all I said was good recipe, but I disagree with THE WHOLE WORLD about the best Bond. I always like Roger Moore. No matter what everyone else says. I’ve always been a rebel like that. And I never got Sean Connery’s appeal in general. But cheers on the beef wellington!

  4. Posted October 8, 2008 at 1:22 pm | Permalink

    Dawn, that’s a good point. I’ll see if I can come up with a good way to do that.

    Bob, one of the recipes I was working from used mushrooms and bacon. (And several other things.) There are a lot of variations of this one.

    Kristin, take a look at the “PS” I added to the end. The internet didn’t eat it, Blogger did.

  5. LTB
    Posted October 9, 2008 at 3:40 pm | Permalink

    My grandmom used to make this a few times a year on special occasions. It was so incredibly delicious. No one in the family has her recipe though.

  6. Posted October 9, 2008 at 7:35 pm | Permalink

    LTB, if you start with really good beef, and just about any diced, fried aromatics, it’s going to be delish.

  7. recipes2share
    Posted October 10, 2008 at 1:33 am | Permalink

    Loved Roger Moore…and Beef Wellington until I managed to have it 3 times in 1 weekend! Never mind, I think this looks just grand.

  8. Posted October 10, 2008 at 8:04 am | Permalink

    Fiona, I do know what you mean, actually. When I was in a Marine Corps band, we played at each unit’s Birthday Ball celebration. The menu nearly always had a choice between prime rib and chicen cordon bleu. After three meals in a row of prime rib, we snuck into the kitchen before the fourth and asked if we could have burgers and fries.

  9. recipes2share
    Posted October 10, 2008 at 10:37 am | Permalink

    Funny you say that, this event was a Royal Air Force Summer Ball & the leftovers for everyone helping clear away, along with a barrel of beer I think….those were our (slightly!) younger days!!

  10. Anonymous
    Posted October 26, 2008 at 4:30 pm | Permalink

    This is the best Beef Wellington recipe. Most of the work is done ahead. http://www.lulu.com/content/4619689

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