Beer-Braised Beef and Onions

- Total Time
- 3½ hours, plus marinating
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1tablespoon kosher salt, more as needed
- 1teaspoon black pepper, more for garnish
- 6bay leaves
- 2teaspoons sweet paprika, more for garnish
- 4pounds boneless beef stew meat, cut into 1½-inch chunks
- 1tablespoon unsalted butter
- 1tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil, more as needed
- 4Spanish or very large yellow onions, thinly sliced
- 6sprigs fresh thyme
- 4sprigs fresh parsley, plus chopped parsley, for garnish
- 1tablespoon tomato paste
- 1teaspoon ground coriander
- ¼teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 1tablespoon all-purpose flour
- 2cups beef or chicken stock, preferably homemade
- 1cup beer, preferably Belgian-style or brown ale
- Flaky sea salt, for garnish
- Dijon-style mustard, preferably extra-hot, for serving
Preparation
- Step 1
In a large bowl, combine salt, pepper, bay leaves and paprika. Toss meat to coat, then cover, refrigerate and marinate at least 2 hours or overnight.
- Step 2
Heat oven to 325 degrees. In a large (8-quart) Dutch oven or other heavy pot, heat butter and oil over medium-high until shimmering. Working in batches, brown beef on two sides until dark and crusty, transferring to a bowl when browned (reserve bay leaves). As you cook, add more oil and adjust heat if necessary to prevent burning.
- Step 3
When all the meat is browned, add onions to the empty pot and return the heat to medium-high if you lowered it. Cook, stirring and scraping up the brown coating on the bottom of the pan as the onions release their liquid.
- Step 4
Continue cooking until onions are deeply golden brown and soft, 20 to 30 minutes, stirring occasionally.
- Step 5
Meanwhile, make a bouquet garni by tying thyme, parsley and reserved bay leaves together with kitchen string (or just throw them in the pot and warn your guests not to eat them).
- Step 6
Push the onions to the sides, then add tomato paste, coriander and cinnamon to the bottom of the pan. Cook, stirring, 1 minute, until paste is darkened and fragrant. Stir in flour, cook another minute, then add stock, beer, 1 cup water and bouquet garni. Return beef and any juices in the bowl to the pot, bring to a simmer, then cover and transfer to oven. Cook until beef is tender, about 2½ to 3 hours, turning it over halfway through.
- Step 7
If the sauce seems thin, remove the meat with a slotted spoon; cover with foil to keep warm. Return pot with liquid to stove and simmer until thickened to taste, 5 to 10 minutes. Return the meat to pot and stir to heat through. Serve from the pot or a platter. Garnish with chopped parsley, flaky sea salt, pepper and paprika. Serve with mustard on the side.
- To make this in an electric pressure cooker, reduce stock to 1 cup and cook at high pressure for 35 minutes. If using a slow cooker, cook on low for 5 to 7 hours.
Private Notes
Comments
I still miss the videos
I've never been able to cook onions for any length of time at "medium-high" without burning the heck out of them, especially if I only check on them "occasionally." So sick of recipes giving bad onion tips.
This is a favorite dish of ours. When I lived in Belgium I learned to finish it this way: cut thick slices of bread from a baguette and cover one side of the slices in Dijon mustard. Just before serving push the bread slices into the dish mustard side up, and run under the grill. This adds the flavor of the mustard and soaks up the sauce.
For the most part, made as instructed, but used short rib instead of stew meat, used Mexican lager instead of Belgian ale, and subbed cumin for coriander. The end result was intensely flavorful and paired well with homemade fries. I usually skip draining the fat from the pan after sautéing beef, but this dish would have benefited from it (likely due to my choice of short rib).
I see recommendations to add a bit of chocolate. Love the idea. But should it be sweetened or unsweetened?
Fantastic. Didn’t do anything different except added carrot slices when there was ~ 45 min left. Made for a small dinner party (with herbed creamy polenta). Really good
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