Considered by many to be the mother of all stews, Beef Bourguignon is a French dish made with beef, bacon lardons, carrots, onions and mushrooms slow cooked in a rich red wine sauce.
For the most magnificent stew of your life, start this 2 days before you plan to serve it, do not shortcut pan-roasting ingredients individually, and use homemade beef stock!
Beef Bourguignon
One of my fondest memories of travels in Burgundy was discovering family-run bistros in small villages that served traditional French fare so incredible, you’d swear you were in a hidden Michelin star restaurant.
And being right in the region from which Beef Bourguignon hails, it was hard to resist ordering this iconic dish time and time again. Every bistro had their secret recipe, and no two were exactly the same.
Except, perhaps, the quality that each of them were to me, the most incredible Beef Burgundy I’ve ever had in my life!.
I just need to add one more to that list though: This Beef Bourguignon recipe you’re reading. It was created with the assistance of a classically trained French chef from Burgundy residing right here in Sydney, Jean-Baptiste Alexandre of Baptiste & Wilson. For a dish this iconic, I refused to just settle for any old recipe.
This Beef Bourguignon is hands-down better than any I’ve made in my life – including Julia Child’s recipe.
What goes in Beef Bourguignon
There are two main components to making Beef Bourguignon:
Red wine-marinated beef; and
Slow cooked stew
1. Red wine marinade for beef
Here’s what you need for the red wine-marinated beef:
Chuck beef – Not all beef is created equal, even when slow-cooked into fall-apart submission! Look for good quality chuck beef, ribboned with fat for the juiciest result.
Also, be sure to either buy BIG pre-cut pieces – as in 4-5 cm / 2” cubes – or a one single piece which you slice up yourself. If you purchase pre-cut pieces that are too small, they will cook faster than the time it takes for the sauce to develop enough flavour;
Pinot noir – Beef Bourguignon is also known as Beef Burgundy, and thus the wine called for is a Pinot Noir – the most famous variety of wine produced in the Burgundy region of France.
Using a lighter style wine might sound unexpected for a hearty stew, but the more delicate flavour compared to bolder wines like Shiraz makes it ideal for using as a marinade so the red wine flavour doesn’t overwhelm the natural beef flavour.
We’re using a whole bottle here. Sorry folks, you’ll need another bottle for drinking!
Thyme and bay leaves – Classic herb aromatics;
Carrot – Just your everyday standard carrots will do fine;
Pearl onions – These small onions are the traditional onions used in Beef Bourguignon but are annoyingly difficult to find here in Australia. I use what’s sold as “pickling onions” which are virtually the same but slightly larger, so I peel an extra layer or two off the surface to make them pearl onion size (~3 cm / 1.2″ diameter).
Alternative: Just use slices of a normal onion. The end result tastes the same, I promise!
2. The stew
And here’s what goes into the stew:
Beef stock – The single biggest variable on which a stew hinges, differentiating a good home-cooked stew and a quality, why-does-this-restaurant-stew-taste-so-damned-good result.
Homemade beef stock trumps store-bought. But if you’re going down the store-bought path, try to opt for a good quality stock from the butcher rather than the cheap mass-produced stuff. The difference I promise is remarkable.
Having said that though, I would never say that this is not worth making with basic supermarket beef stock. It is, oh-so-very worth making!
Bacon – Get slab bacon from your butcher if you can, so you can cut it yourself into big chunky lardons (batons). A proper bite of meaty bacon lardons is part of the awesomeness that is Beef Bourguignon.
If you can’t find slab bacon, try speck (which in Australia seems to usually smoked pork belly chunks). Failing that, normal bacon slices works just fine too;
Mushrooms – Just your everyday normal mushrooms. Cut large ones into quarters, medium ones in half;
Garlic – Flavouring (rare to see a savoury dish around here without it!);
Tomato paste – For a touch of tang, to help thicken the sauce, for flavour and for colour; and
Flour – For thickening the sauce.
How to make Beef Bourguignon
For the absolute best results, start this 2 days before you plan to serve it to allow for:
Overnight marinating of the beef; and
Leaving the finished stew overnight to let the flavours develop even further.
Part 1: Beef marinade
Marinate beef for 24 hours in red wine with the onion, carrot, thyme and bay leaves. This tenderises and infuses the beef with beautiful flavour. I’ve tried it with and without marinating, and marinating is way better. It’s worth it!
Strain and reserve the red wine – we’re going to reduce it to use as the stew braising liquid;
Reduce wine – Pour red wine into a saucepan;
Reduce – Simmer until reduced by half, about 7 minutes on medium high. Skim any scum off the surface using a ladle;
Pat beef dry – Separate the beef from the carrots and onion, then pat dry. Why? Because wet beef won’t brown. Browning is key for flavour!
Season beef with salt and pepper. Ugh, please don’t skip this step. I once did, and even though I was salting the sauce furiously at the end, it just wasn’t the same!
Part 2: Making the stew
It’s well worth taking the time to brown each of the ingredients individually before slow cooking in the braising liquid. The browning adds a depth of flavour you just can’t achieve by dumping everything in at the same time!
Brown beef aggressively all over, because colour = flavour! A very heavy pot like a cast iron pot / Dutch oven works best for this job.
Be sure to use enough oil so the beef browns rather than burns. Work in batches and don’t crowd the pot otherwise the beef will just braise instead of brown.
Once browned, remove into a bowl;
Bacon – Cook the bacon next, to release all that tasty bacon fat which we then use to brown the subsequent ingredients;
Onion next – Just cook until you get some nice golden patches, it’s impossible to make it golden all over due to the shape. Put these in a separate bowl because these get added back into the stew partway though the slow cooking phase;
Mushrooms – Cook the mushrooms until golden, then add them into the same bowl as the onions;
Carrots last – And finally, pan-roast the carrots until you get some lovely colour on them. We add some butter here, because you’ll find that the mushrooms soak up all the remaining bacon fat, but we need some fat to make the roux with the flour in the next step;
Tomato paste and flour – Add the tomato paste and cook to take the raw edge off. Then add flour and cook for a minute;
Add liquid – Slowly add the beef stock while stirring so the flour dissolves easily, no lumps! Then stir the reduced red wine in;
Add beef, bacon, thyme and bay leaves, then give it a good stir and bring to a simmer. Now, it’s ready to slow-cook into fall-apart magnificence!
Part 3. Slow-cooking
This is all about time – and not forgetting to add the onion and mushrooms partway through!
Oven 1 hour – Cover pot then place in the oven for 1 hour at 180°C/350°F (160°C fan). At this temperature, the stew is simmering very, very gently in the oven, like it would on a low stove. I find the oven is easier than stove because you don’t have to worry about the base catching – no need to stir;
Add onion and mushroom then give it a gentle stir;
Return to the oven for another 1½ hours, until the beef is “fall apart tender” – like THIS:
Adjust thickness and salt – At this stage, if the sauce hasn’t reduced enough (ie. too thin) or the sauce is too thick (which can happen if you didn’t use a heavy-based pot), you can adjust it using the stove.
If it’s too thin, just simmer gently on low heat. It won’t take long to reduce and thicken. If the sauce is too thick, add a splash of water then simmer gently to bring it together again.
Also, don’t forget to check if there’s enough salt in the sauce! Taste and adjust as necessary. 🙂
Highly recommended: Leave overnight before serving
As with all stews, Beef Bourguignon benefits greatly if you can leave it overnight which lets the flavours develop further and meld together even better.
Don’t get me wrong, it is sensational served on the day it’s made. But it’s even better the next day!
What to serve with Beef Bourguignon
I suppose one could serve this over a short pasta, polenta, or a grain. But for me, I would never contemplate anything other than buttery Mashed Potatoes!
And while I usually offer Paris Mash as an even more luxe alternative, I actually think it’s too rich for Beef Burgundy.
Complete your Burgundy experience with a fresh French Bistro Salad on the side. You’ll find variations of this salad served all over France, for a clean and palate-cleansing side intended to serve alongside hearty mains like this.
Enjoy! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
Hungry for more? Subscribe to my newsletter and follow along on Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram for all of the latest updates.
Beef Bourguignon (Beef Burgundy)
Ingredients
Beef marinade:
- 800g/ 1.6 lb chuck beef , cut in 4-5 cm / 2” cubes (Note 1)
- 2 large carrots (~300g/10oz), cut on an angle into 4-5 cm / 2” pieces
- 16 pearl onions or small, round pickling onions (Note 2)
- 1 bay leaf , fresh (sub: dried)
- 3 sprigs thyme
- 750ml/ 25 oz pinot noir or other red wine (Note 3)
Browning beef:
- 3 tbsp oil , olive, canola or vegetable
- 3/4 tsp salt
- 1/2 tsp pepper
Stew:
- 200g/ 7oz mushrooms , halved (quarters if large)
- 150g/ 5oz bacon piece , cut into 1cm / 1/2” thick batons (Note 4)
- 50g/3 tbsp unsalted butter
- 3 garlic cloves , minced
- 2 tbsp tomato paste
- 6 tbsp flour , plain/all purpose
- 3 cups beef stock (low sodium) , preferably homemade; otherwise the best you can afford (Note 5)
- 1/4 tsp salt
- 2 tbsp chopped parsley , for garnish
Instructions
Marinate beef:
- Marinate beef: Place the Beef Marinade ingredients in a large, non-reactive ceramic dish or ziplock bag. Marinate overnight in the fridge (minimum 12 hours, maximum 24 hours).
- Strain liquid into a bowl, reserve marinade. Separate the beef, carrots and onion.
- Reduce wine: Pour red wine into a saucepan and bring to a boil over medium high heat. Simmer vigorously, skimming off any impurities that rise to the surface, until reduced by half. Set aside.
Brown beef and vegetables:
- Preheat oven to 180°C / 350°F (160°C fan).
- Dry beef: Line a tray with paper towels, spread beef out, then pat dry with paper towels.
- Season beef: Sprinkle beef with 3/4 tsp salt and 1/2 tsp black pepper.
- Brown beef: Heat 2 tbsp oil in a large, heavy-based, oven-proof pot over high heat. Add 1/3 beef and brown aggressively all over. Remove into bowl, then repeat with remaining beef, adding more oil if needed.
- Fry bacon: Add bacon and cook for 3 minutes until golden. Add to bowl with beef.
- Sauté mushrooms: Add mushrooms and cook for 5 minutes, or until golden. Remove into a new bowl.
- Sauté onion: Add a bit of extra oil if needed, then cook onions for 5 minutes or until there are nice golden patches. Add to bowl with mushrooms.
- Sauté carrot: Add butter into pot. Once melted, add carrot and cook for 3 – 4 minutes until there are golden patches. Add garlic and cook for a further 1 minute.
- Tomato paste: Add tomato paste and cook for 2 minutes.
- Flour: Add flour and cook for 2 minutes.
- Add wine and stock: While stirring, slowly pour in beef stock – this helps the flour dissolve lump-free into the stock. Then add wine and mix until flour mixture is dissolved and mostly lump-free (Note 6).
- Add beef into pot: Add beef, bacon, thyme, bay leaf, 1/4 tsp salt and pepper into the pot, then stir well.
Slow-cook:
- Oven 1 hour: Bring to a simmer, then cover and transfer to oven for 1 hour. (Note 7)
- Mushrooms and onion: Remove from oven, stir in mushrooms and onion.
- Oven 1½ hours: Cover with lid and return to oven for 1½ hours, or until beef is "fall-apart tender".
- Adjust salt: Remove from oven, taste sauce and add salt if needed. (Note 8 – important!)
- Leave overnight (recommended): If time permits, leave the stew overnight before serving because as with all stews, it gets better with time! Reheat gently on a low stove.
- Serve over mashed potato – Essential for mopping up every drop of that amazing sauce!
Recipe Notes:
1. Chuck beef – Look for beef that’s nicely ribboned with fat, as it will be juicier and more tender. Don’t buy pre-cut small pieces, they will cook too quickly before the flavour in the sauce develops. It’s better to buy a big piece and cut your own to size. 2. Pearl onions are very small onions and are irritatingly hard to find in Australia. The closest are pickling onions which are slightly bigger, so just peel an extra layer or two off to make them the right size – around 2.5cm/1″ in diameter. Soak them for 10/15min in cold water, it will soften the skin and will make them easier to peel (use a small knife to assist). You can also just use 2 brown or yellow onions, halved then cut into 1cm / 2/5” slices. 3. 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. Just rummage through the discount bins at your local liquor store. The bottle I used an end-of-bin bottle steeply discounted to $7 (I stocked up!). 4. Bacon Lardons – Biting into a thick piece of bacon is all part of the Beef Bourguignon experience! If you can’t find a slab of bacon to cut yourself, try speck which is similar (and similar fat % too which is key!). Otherwise, just use streaky bacon cut into strips. Bacon is key for sauce seasoning, so don’t skip it! 5. Beef stock quality is the key variable here that will set apart a good homemade Beef Bourguignon from an exceptional restaurant-quality one. Homemade beef stock trumps any store bought. Good quality store-bought from butchers etc. are far better than mass-produced (like Campbell’s here in Australia). Do not use powdered beef stock. It’s frankly inferior to even the packet liquid stock and has no place here amongst all this effort, I’m afraid! 6. Flour lumps – Don’t fret if you have some lumps! They will dissolve during the slow cooking time 🙂 7. Cook method – Oven is best because it’s entirely hands off, no need to stir to ensure base doesn’t catch. But it can also be done on a low stove, lid on, stirring every now and then (take extra care towards the end so the meat doesn’t break apart). Slow cooker: This can work but you’ll need to reduce on the stove at the end to thicken sauce. Slow-cook for 4 hours on low, add mushrooms and onion, then slow cook a further 4 hours. Transfer to pot then simmer (no lid) for 15 – 20 minutes until sauce reduces. I really think it’s just easier to use the oven! 8. Salt quantity required varies drastically depending on saltiness of bacon, homemade vs store bought stock (homemade is unsalted), so always do this at the end and trust your tastebuds. With homemade beef stock, I add another 3/4 tsp salt. With store bought, it’s unlikely you’ll need more salt. 9. Storage – Stew will keep for 5 days in the fridge, and freezes great! 10. Recipe source: Developed with the assistance of a classically trained French chef from Burgundy, Jean-Baptiste Alexandre of Baptise & Wilson. For a dish this iconic, I refused to just settle for any old recipe! Better than the Julia Child recipe I’d been using for years. 🙂 11. Nutrition per serving, assuming 5 servings.
Nutrition Information:
Life of Dozer
Where he’s been positioned while I’ve been bashing out this recipe. Notice how he sprawls across two seats – and also notice how I thoughtfully pushed them together for him. #sucker
Grandi Sandi says
I’ve made this twice and this time was even better than the last time, this recipe is a keeper
Kate says
I want to double this recipe to serve 10 people. The recipe then says to use 2 bottles of wine for the marinade. That seems like a lot! I can see doubling all the other ingredients, but do I need to double the wine too?
Vivianne Brener says
I have this question too.
Patricia says
Can you use frozen pearl onions?
Jason says
I made this on fathers day for 10 people and it was a HUGE HIT. Even the kids ate it which is a big Win considering my kids are super fussy eaters.
The instructions were terrific and easy to follow along. It took a bit of time but definitely worth the effort.
Thanks Nagi, huge Fan.
Olivier says
Belle recette. Je conseille d’ajouter 15 à 20 grammes de chocolat noir à 70% en fin de cuisson. Le chocolat noir permet de lier la sauce et de la rendre bien nappante et brillante.
John stewart says
I made this as per your lovely recipe Nagi, my 1st French meal, thank you SO MUCH, it was absolutely beautiful,and my wife LOVED it! Recipe & video so EASY to follow! Our warmest thanks,John ‘n Deb Stewart
Reid says
Gooday Nagi
I followed your Beef Bourguignon recipe for a Friday night dinner with friends.
Just wonderful results and served with mash potato, side of green beans, crusty loaf, red wine and great conversation.
Took time to follow your beef stock procedure, and am very grateful for your dedication to the craft of good food.
Thank you very much.
Regards Reid
Yvonne Reid says
It is so disappointing when you follow a recipe to the tee and it turns out bad. This recipe was the BEST that I have followed for this kind of meal. It was so delicious. Thank you
Nikki says
This recipe is hands-down, the best bourguignon recipe I’ve tried, just sensational! I used a Cape Grim chuck roast which was tender and flavoursome, and pickling onions worked well. Thank you!
El says
Made this for a french themed dinner party and it was a hit! I spent the extra time to make my own beef stock and cooked it the night ahead so I could let the flavours intensify and then to serve I brought the pot up to simmer for half an hour and served it with potato mash. It was delicious and well worth the effort!
katie says
Great recipe, thank you Nagi. Just passing on a warning about better stocks, if you’re in Australia don’t buy Maggie Beers for this recipe! I made the mistake of not reading the ingredients. It has cinnamon and star anise! It tasted wrong. There’s no indication on the package that it’s Asian style? I was pretty mad after all that work!
Barbara Owen says
Nagi: Would using a cut up Bolar Roast work in this recipe? I have one frozen and would prefer to use it instead of buying more meat now. This is my very favorite recipe for beef burgundy! .Thank you!
Julia Ogden says
Lishish it was. Didn’t have no pearl onions, lardons nor sprigs of thyme but made do with yellow onions, dried thyme and streaky bacon. Full of authentic frenchiness and complexoisity. You know, maybe I ought not drink and post….
Jackie says
I’ve only just realised that you provide the ingredients to different serving sizes!! (Doh) I made this for my husband’s 60th dinner party for 20 guests. I felt like I’d taken on a monster it was so big. Thank you so much for giving me the confidence to take on challenges like this because I know and trust that your recipes always taste fantastic. I made the tiramisu for desert; thought I’d have leftovers…no such luck. All of our guests thank you.
Roz says
Smashed a double recipe version of this for a big family feed. Foolproof (Like all Nagi’s recipe’s). Big tip: a really hot pan to brown the beef so it doesn’t stew (small batches works!)
Mary says
Made this once and was out of this world.. Mashed potatoes definately needed here. Loved it.
Lisa McIntosh says
Hi Nagi, I made this recipe with kangaroo fillet and cooked it in the slow cooker (which has a removable cooktop and oven proof insert), then reduced the sauce on the hot plate at the end. It was fabulous and had guests raving. Thanks so much. Your recipes are always superb. Lisa
Dawn Metcalf says
Way above average recipe organization, comments, pictures etc. Very easy to follow. Made the recipe as written. I have never made this before so I wasn’t sure what to expect other than beef stew-ish. This was extremely full of flavor (used homemade stock, recipe from Nagi as well). I believe it would be completely different with boxed stock so if time permits, don’t skip homemade stock. Served as a birthday dinner with Nagi’s mashed potatoes and homemade artisan bread (Sallys Baking Addition). One guest is a definite foody and has had this many times. This is better than fancy restaurants, according to him!! Thanks, Nagi, for making me look like a mega-star in the kitchen!!
Esther says
Nagi, would a bottle of bordeaux be a suitable wine to use? If you thought not could I use less and top up with extra stock or water?
BTW the chicken coq au vin was wonderful!
Emma says
Wow! This one is amazing and well worth the effort. Followed the recipe exactly and turned out brilliant!
Tom says
You recommended leaving the stew overnight for better flavor. Do you refrigerate it or leave it out? Covered of course!
Scott S says
Definitely in the fridge, for the sake of food hygiene and not getting any nasty surprises the next day.
Cool first to room temperature, then pop in the fridge until ready to reheat.
kenny says
I’m always interested to know this too. Basic food safety says fridge then reheat, but people been leaving stews out overnight for hundreds of years and we’re still here.
Daniel C says
Hi Nagi – it’s the beginning if Winter and I’m cooking your Beef Bourguignon recipe again; it’s divine! Regarding the hard to find pearl onions – my local IGA has “pickeling onions”, would you recommend these as an alternative? They should soak up the goodness well? 😁
Seamus says
I’ve made a bunch of recipes from you’re website Nagi so I knew that this was going to be at the very least good but man, this was transcendental. So rich, simple yet complex and perfect on a cold wet night. Didn’t use homemade stock (used a combo of upscale beef broth and stock) but would certainly make that effort next time. Seriously, amazing meal.