Coffee-Roasted Fillet of Beef

- Total Time
- 2 hours 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 2dried pasilla chilies
- 16-inch white-corn tortilla
- 3tablespoons unsalted butter
- 1½cups chopped white onion
- 4large cloves garlic
- 2½cups chicken stock
- ¼cup heavy cream
- Kosher salt
- 1teaspoon light-brown sugar
- 3tablespoons medium-roast coffee beans, finely ground
- 1tablespoon cocoa powder
- ⅛teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 12-pound beef tenderloin roast, cut from the large end, trimmed and tied at ½ -inch intervals with kitchen twine
- Kosher salt and black pepper
- 2tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
- ¾pound shiitake mushrooms, stemmed and quartered
- Sprigs of watercress
Preparation
- Step 1
Seed, stem and cut the chilies into pieces. Tear the tortilla into pieces. Set both aside. In a saucepan, melt 1 tablespoon butter over medium-high heat. Add the onion and garlic and sauté until translucent, about 3 minutes. Add the chilies and tortilla and cook over medium-low heat, stirring, until softened. Pour in the stock, bring to a boil and then simmer, partly covered, for 10 minutes. In a blender, purée the hot mixture until smooth. Pour through a fine sieve set over a saucepan, pressing on the solids. Discard the solids. Whisk in the cream, 1 teaspoon salt and the brown sugar. Season to taste.
- Step 2
Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. In a bowl, whisk together the coffee, cocoa and cinnamon. Pat the beef dry and rub with 2 teaspoons salt and 1 teaspoon pepper; then rub with oil. Sprinkle the coffee mixture over a sheet of wax paper and coat the beef in it. Place the beef on a rack set in a roasting pan and let stand at room temperature for 30 minutes.
- Step 3
Roast the beef for 10 minutes; then lower the temperature to 250 and cook for an hour more, or until the meat reaches 130 degrees. Let stand, loosely covered with foil, for 10 minutes. (The meat will continue to cook, reaching about 135 degrees.)
- Step 4
Bring the broth to a boil and simmer until just thick enough to coat the back of a spoon. Cover and keep warm.
- Step 5
In a large skillet, melt the remaining butter over medium-high heat. Add the mushrooms and sauté until golden. Season with salt and pepper.
- Step 6
Remove the twine and cut the beef into ½-inch-thick slices. Spoon just enough broth to cover the bottoms of 4 to 6 shallow, wide soup bowls. Add 2 to 3 slices of beef, spoon more broth over the beef if desired and top with mushrooms and watercress.
Private Notes
Comments
This was OK, there are better preparations for an expensive tenderloin. Sauce could use a mid note flavor in addition to the top of the pasilla chile and mellow bottom of cream/corn tortilla. The rub coating did keep the very lean roast moist, finished at med. rare. Will not do again.
Excellent: lots of flavor. To make dinner night easier you can premake and reheat the sauce. I served this with also a simple sweet potato mash, placed at the center of the bowl/plate, on which I stacked the beef. This added a carb and paired well with the sauce and coffee rub crust. Enjoy!
I have made this several times and everyone loves it! A lot of flavor without too much fuss
I don't know where I originally found this recipe (Fine Cooking back in the 1990's??) but have made it so many times and it's always a hit. Then I lost the recipe when moving countries. Working from memory I missed things. THIS IS IT, except my original didn't have the shiitake mushrooms, and I like that idea. The sauce can be made ahead. Will making for my husband's birthday this week.
I made this years ago and lost the recipe. Glad to have found it and will try again. What I remember about it is this: my son-in-law, 2 minutes after taking the plate over to eat in front of the TV joined us at the dining table stating "This is too delicious to eat in front of a TV."
Made this for Christmas dinner and it was a showstopper. It’s gorgeous on the plate and the flavors were complex and delicious. Three important points: use fine ground coffee. I just grabbed some coffee from our freezer, and it was too course. Also ours was dark roast and too bitter/intense. Definitely go for medium roast. Last, I agree with the post from Chelsea, the steps are in a weird order. No need to start the sauce/soup until you have the roast in the oven.
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