Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Food/recipes

For related content, visit our food content hub.

beef wellington....your recipes please

11 replies

crispyduck · 21/12/2008 07:59

Not making it till new years day as it is dh's birthday

never done this before

any recipes would be appreciated?

thanks

OP posts:
Overmydeadbody · 21/12/2008 08:28

Courtesy of Gordon:

ingredients:
Ingredientsa good beef fillet (preferably Aberdeen Angus) of around 1kg
3 tbsp olive oil
250g chestnut mushrooms , include some wild ones if you like
50g butter
1 large sprig fresh thyme
100ml dry white wine
12 slices prosciutto
500g pack puff pastry , thawed if frozen
a little flour , for dusting
2 egg yolks beaten with 1 tsp water

Heat oven to 220C/fan 200C/gas 7. Sit the beef on a roasting tray, brush with 1 tbsp olive oil and season with pepper, then roast for 15 mins for medium-rare or 20 mins for medium. When the beef is cooked to your liking, remove from the oven to cool, then chill in the fridge for about 20 mins.
While the beef is cooling, chop the mushrooms as finely as possible so they have the texture of coarse breadcrumbs. You can use a food processor to do this, but make sure you pulse-chop the mushrooms so they don't become a slurry.
Heat 2 tbsp of the oil and all the butter in a large pan and fry the mushrooms on a medium heat, with the thyme sprig, for about 10 mins stirring often, until you have a softened mixture. Season the mushroom mixture, pour over the wine and cook for about 10 mins until all the wine has been absorbed. The mixture should hold its shape when stirred. Remove the mushroom duxelle from the pan to cool and discard the thyme.
Overlap two pieces of cling film over a large chopping board. Lay the prosciutto on the cling film, slightly overlapping, in a double row. Spread half the duxelles over the prosciutto, then sit the fillet on it and spread the remaining duxelles over. Use the cling film's edges to draw the prosciutto around the fillet, then roll it into a sausage shape, twisting the ends of cling film to tighten it as you go. Chill the fillet while you roll out the pastry.
Roll out a third of the pastry to a 18 x 30cm strip and place on a non-stick baking sheet. Roll out the remaining pastry to about 28 x 36cm. Unravel the fillet from the cling film and sit it in the centre of the smaller strip of pastry and brush the pastry's edges, and the top and sides of the wrapped fillet, with beaten egg yolk. Using a rolling pin, carefully lift and drape the larger piece of pastry over the fillet, pressing well into the sides. Trim the joins to about a 4cm rim. Seal the rim with the edge of a fork or spoon handle. Glaze all over with more egg yolk and, using the back of a knife, mark the beef Wellington with long diagonal lines taking care not to cut into the pastry. Chill for at least 30 mins and up to 24 hrs.
Heat oven to 200C/fan 180C/gas 6. Brush the Wellington with a little more egg yolk and cook until golden and crisp - 20-25 mins for medium-rare beef, 30 mins for medium. Allow to stand for 10 mins before serving in thick slices.

Dreyfus · 21/12/2008 08:38

Seal your seasoned, trimmed fillet of beef in sizzling butter in a frying pan, turning often so it is browned all over (takes ten mins or so.) If the fillet is not a nice square shape then you can tie it with clean cooking string as fillet tends to shrink and curl when cooked, but I don't usually bother myself. Put it into a hot oven and roast uncovered for 10 mins or so, basted with the pan juices.

Leave it to cool. Remove string when cold.

Spread the meat with good paté or a duxelle of fried chopped shallots and mushrooms, maybe in a red wine reduction. (I don't do either of these things as DH likes it plain, but they are traditional and add a touch of extra luxury.)

Wrap in bought puff-pastry with the join undreneath, seal with egg glaze, decorate along the top with cut-out pastry leaves. Glaze all over with beaten egg for a golden colour.

Into a hot oven (200 C) for 40 mins. If it is a small fillet and you like it rare, it will take less time. Bit tricky to judge, to be honest, since you can't check how the beef is doing inside the pastry crust, but that is the timing given in my recipe for a 2lb piece of meat. What I've done in the past is give it a little less time, then slice and replace in the oven if it's too bloody for DG's taste. But then you don't get the triumph of bringing the whole thing in in its glory.

starbear · 21/12/2008 08:47

I did this last year. 1st time I made my own pastry. Looked really awful, pastry didn't cover the joint and I had to do a patchwork effect not a good look. Guests were nice about it and it did taste lovely. Mum said that the kitchen wasn't cold enough for pastry making. 2nd time I used ready made frozen and it was fab with lots of compliments from strangely same guests. Don't forget to make some gravy or sauce.
I'm going to make it again this year but don't know which day as we are going out more this year!

starbear · 21/12/2008 08:48

Good luck

crispyduck · 21/12/2008 09:20

thanks guys

got some great ideas here

never made pastry before so should I buy it prepacked?

OP posts:
Pennies · 21/12/2008 09:22

Jamie Oliver does a really great version when he uses parma ham instead of puff pastry and it is yummmm....

Pennies · 21/12/2008 09:24

Here it is

crispyduck · 21/12/2008 09:25

overmydeadbody
just realised your recipe has prepacked pastry- I think thats my safe bet really

mmmmmm cant wait yummy

OP posts:
crispyduck · 21/12/2008 09:26

thanks pennies

OP posts:
Dreyfus · 21/12/2008 09:35

I'm quite an experienced cook but I'd never make puff pastry unless I was a) doing penance for some awful sin or b) had gone mad. The frozen is better than anything you will turn out without loads of practice and is much, much less work It really isn't worth making as the bought stuff is good.

I even bought the ready rolled sheets this year (instead of in a block) though this does mean you may have to do a bit of patching if the sheet is a little small for your beef.

Overmydeadbody · 21/12/2008 12:24

Oh yes, for goodness sake don't try to make your own pastry! Life is too short. Spend the time drinking instead

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread