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Any Ideas For A Beef Bourguignon In A Slow Cooker
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I'd like to do this with cream potatoes as a main course when we go to a log cabin for my sister in laws birthday in 4 weeks time,
I was thinking
Broccoli and Stilton soup as a starter
Beef bourguignon with cream potatoes as the main course
A fruit skewer kebab dipped in Hotel chocolate
Finished with a cheese board and grapes
I've never done a bourguignon before , is it as similar as a diced steak casserole, and I'd like to add red wine to it , I've looked at recipes online but they differ greatly
I was thinking
Broccoli and Stilton soup as a starter
Beef bourguignon with cream potatoes as the main course
A fruit skewer kebab dipped in Hotel chocolate
Finished with a cheese board and grapes
I've never done a bourguignon before , is it as similar as a diced steak casserole, and I'd like to add red wine to it , I've looked at recipes online but they differ greatly
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This is the recipe I use
This is the recipe I use
The link is a nice recipe but I've never had beef Bourgogne with carrot in it. You also need at least 6 cloves of garlic, added with the meat at the beginning which you can leave whole if you want -you will not taste it but it gives a more authentic flavour. 1 bottle of wine would be quite enough, topped up if necessary with a bit of beef stock .
Martin's link provides the guaranteed method of making a decent boeuf bourguignon. Quote: "The secret to this super-rich beef casserole is to use all wine and no stock". While I wouldn't necessarily agree that you've got to leave out the stock entirely, you certainly need to be generous with the wine! The best boeuf bourguignon I've ever tasted was in a restaurant in Bordeaux, where I felt like I ought to be drinking it, rather than eating it!
Be wary of the reference to 'cheap red wine' in Martin's link though. That shouldn't be taken as meaning that you could get away with buying the dreaded 'British wine' that, for example, Asda sell under the 'Three Mills' brand name. As many a TV chef has said, "If it's not good enough to drink, then it's not good enough to cook with!" Look for a house claret for economy but authenticity.
The Hairy Bikers' recipe gets 5 star reviews too:
https:/ /www.bb c.co.uk /food/r ecipes/ boeuf_b ourguig non_254 75
Be wary of the reference to 'cheap red wine' in Martin's link though. That shouldn't be taken as meaning that you could get away with buying the dreaded 'British wine' that, for example, Asda sell under the 'Three Mills' brand name. As many a TV chef has said, "If it's not good enough to drink, then it's not good enough to cook with!" Look for a house claret for economy but authenticity.
The Hairy Bikers' recipe gets 5 star reviews too:
https:/
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