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Beef Tenderloin with Red Wine Sauce

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Beef Tenderloin with Red Wine Sauce

by Joe G in Rouxbe Videos

An elegant, yet simple dish - pan fried beef tenderloin is served with a delicious sauce made with shallots, red wine and dark chicken stock.

Serves
2
Active Time
25 mins
Total Time
25 mins

Step 1: Preparing the Salad

Preparing the Salad
  • 2 cups frisée lettuce (approx.)

To start, wash the frisée lettuce and tear into large pieces. Spin dry and transfer to a large bowl. Set aside while you cook the steaks.

Step 2: Cooking the Steaks

Cooking the Steaks
  • 2 beef tenderloin steaks (about 6 ounces each)
  • 2 tsps grape seed oil

Before cooking the steaks, make sure they have come to room temperature. Once you are ready to cook, season the steaks with salt and pepper. Preheat a heavy fry pan over medium-high heat. Once the pan is hot, add the oil. As soon as the oil just starts to smoke, add the steaks. Because the steaks are a bit thicker, turn the heat down to medium to medium low. Using the flip-often method, after about a minute of cooking, flip the steaks. Let cook again for another minute and flip again. Continue with this same process until the steaks are cooked to your liking.

Once done, remove the steaks, tent with foil and allow to rest, while you make the sauce.

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Step 3: Making the Sauce

Making the Sauce
  • 2 tbsp shallots
  • 3-4 tbsp cold, unsalted butter
  • 1/2 cup dry, red wine
  • 1 cup dark chicken (or veal) stock (Rouxbe recipe*)
  • salt (to taste)
  • pepper (to taste)

To start the sauce, make sure to have the shallots minced and measure out the cold butter and red wine.

Over medium to medium low heat, add about one tablespoon of the butter, followed by the shallots. Cook the shallots until soft and golden. Once ready, deglaze with the red wine, making sure to scrape up any sucs from the bottom of the pan. Let the liquid reduce until you reach a syrupy consistency.

Once a syrupy consistency has been reached, add the dark chicken stock and any juices from the resting steaks and reduce again until slightly thickened. Test the sauce by spooning a bit onto a plate. The sauce should not be too runny or too thick. It should just move nicely on the plate.

To finish the sauce, turn off the heat and swirl in the cold butter, a bit at a time.
The butter not only helps to thicken the sauce it also adds richness and shine.
Finally, season the sauce with salt and pepper to taste.

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Step 4: Finishing and Serving the Dish

Finishing and Serving the Dish
  • extra-virgin olive oil
  • salt (to taste)
  • pepper (to taste)

To finish the salad, add a bit of quality olive oil, salt and pepper. Gently toss to combine and add a bit more of each to taste. Adding the oil and seasoning in stages ensures that you don’t weigh down the greens or over season them.

Gather a few pieces of frisée and place them onto each plate, along with the steaks. Drizzle the hot pan sauce over the steaks and serve immediately.

Notes

Dark Chicken Stock Recipe: rouxbe.com/recipes/800/preview

If you happen to over-reduce the sauce, just thin it out slightly with a bit more stock or water.

Go to School and learn about:

Dark Stocks (rouxbe.com/school/sections/12/objectives)
Pan Frying (rouxbe.com/school/sections/170/objectives)
Cooking Premium Steaks (rouxbe.com/school/sections/127/objectives)

Comments

It was excellent!

I would have paid to eat this, it was really good!

by Christian P | Oct 19, 2008 11:57pm | Permalink
reducing the wine

I could not get the wine to reduce and thicken for the life of me. It did taste rather good anyways though!

by Robert A | 10 days ago | Permalink
Question for Robert

Did you vary the recipe at all? For example, did you use bought stock, omit the butter, not reduce the wine to syrupy consistency, etc.

Let's get to the bottom of this. It will work. Just missing something.

by Joe G | 10 days ago | Permalink
oil

I did use bought stock, but I couldn't get it to become syrupy before adding it. Perhaps more time would have yielded the correct results, but the steaks were getting past the point of resting and into the point of dying. I am thinking the problem might be in the amount of grape seed oil used for the steaks. I just eye-balled it and might have used too much. I've only started cooking in the last month so I don't really know how this would affect it.

by Robert A | 9 days ago | Permalink

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