June 22, 2006
Tod’s Favorite Beef Stroganoff

recipe thursdayJust about every time I want to have a special dinner, romantic candlelight, or fancy occasion meal and I ask Tod what he’d like to have, he answers “beef stroganoff.” And this is the one he means.

Tod’s Favorite Beef Stroganoff
serves 4 or Tod

650 gr beef tenderloin, cut into 2x2x4 cm strips
olive oil
2 Tblsp butter
6 shallots, minced
40 white button mushrooms, thickly sliced
1 cup beef broth
2 Tblsp cognac or brandy
150 ml heavy cream
1 Tblsp dijon mustard
1 Tblsp fresh dill, minced
salt & pepper
paprika

Sprinkle the beef with salt & pepper. Heat a couple tablespoons of oil in a heavy skillet until very hot, then brown the meat on both sides. Work in small batches so you don’t overload the pan, and transfer the browned beef to a baking pan.

Reduce the heat to medium and melt the butter. Saute the shallots, scraping the pan to release the beef drippings. Add the mushrooms and cook about 10 minutes, or until the liquid evaporates. Add the cognac or brandy and the beef broth. Simmer 15 minutes or until the liquid is reduced by about half and coats the mushrooms. Stir in the cream and mustard. Add meat and any juices from the pan. Cook until beef is heated through, about 2 minutes. Season with dill, salt & pepper.

Serve over buttered egg noodles and garnish with paprika.

Posted by kuri at June 22, 2006 09:02 AM

Comments

YUM!!! I think my family will love this, can’t wait to try it.

Posted by: Heidi on June 22, 2006 09:44 PM

Your tragic commingling of metric and English measurements has TAINTED the Matrix.

Posted by: peterb on June 22, 2006 11:17 PM

Oops. OK, here you go in metric. I can’t do the imperial stuff so well anymore…

650 gr
30 gr
6
40
200 ml
30 ml
150 ml
15 ml
15 ml

Posted by: Kristen on June 23, 2006 01:23 AM

It’s sexy when metric and English measurements comingle.

Posted by: Jenn on June 23, 2006 01:47 AM

SUGOI — I sometimes make “beef stroganoff” using “beef stroganoff NO MOTO”. OK, mest return of my elder daughter I’ll try this.

Posted by: Mieko on June 23, 2006 11:38 AM

I much prefer cups and tablespoons for flour, butter etc as I can improvise with kitchen implements for measuing, but for meat I prefer metric as I don’t know pounds and ounces. So your recipe made perfect sense to me - and it is one of my fave meals as well. Noodles are a different touch - we normally have rice.

Posted by: T on June 23, 2006 02:32 PM
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