A classic British sticky toffee pudding recipe made deliciously gooey by cooking it to the perfect temperature.
Richard Holden's Beef Wellington
This traditional Beef Wellington recipe is all about good quality beef cooked perfectly. Richard cooked this beef medium rare, but it's easy to cook yours however you like using the beef Wellington temperatures provided.
The medium rare Beef Wellington temperature is 56 °C. However, the temperature of meat continues to rise as it rests, so it's better to remove it from the oven a little early to get the best result. Richard recommends removing it at 48 °C to finish at around 56 °C.
BEEF WELLINGTON Temperatures
The full list of Beef Wellington temperatures are:
Rare: 52 °C
Medium: 60 °C
Well done: 71 °C
Remember to remove your Wellington from the oven around 8 °C early to get the final finish spot on.
Ingredients
- 1kg centre cut beef fillet
- Salt & pepper
- Rapeseed oil
- Dijon mustard
- 500g all butter puff pastry
- 2 eggs, beaten
For the duxelles
- 500g chestnut mushrooms, finely chopped
- Knob of unsalted butter
- Rapeseed oil
- Sprigs of fresh thyme
- Salt & pepper
- A little freshly grated nutmeg
For the chive pancakes
- 100g plain flour
- 2 eggs, large
- 100ml whole milk
- ½ packet chives, finely chopped
- Salt & pepper
- Unsalted butter
Directions
- Drizzle 2 tbsp of rapeseed oil into a medium roasting tray and season with salt and pepper. Pat the fillet dry and roll in the seasoned oil until coated evenly all over.
- Heat a frying pan on a medium-high heat and add the fillet. Sear evenly all over to create that beautiful caramelisation and crust. This will take minutes as you are just searing the outside, the inside should still be raw. Remove from the pan and place in the fridge on a plate.
- To make the duxelles heat a knob of butter and a little oil in a frying pan over a medium high heat. Add the thyme and mushrooms. Season with salt and pepper, and a little freshly grated nutmeg. Cook in batches if necessary but don’t overcrowd the pan. The mushrooms will reduce in size and begin to caramelise, and you need to continue cooking until all of that savoury umami liquid has boiled off and reduced to an intensified flavour that coats the mushrooms. Remove from the pan to a clean plate and place to one side to cool.
- To make the chive pancakes add the flour to a bowl and crack in the eggs. Whisk until they are fully combined and the paste is thick and smooth. Add half of the milk and whisk gently to loosen the mixture, ensuring it’s smooth before adding the remaining milk. Season with salt and pepper and mix in the chives.
- Heat a knob of butter with a dash of oil in a frying pan on a medium high heat and add enough batter to coat the base of the pan when swirled around. Flip when golden on the bottom and cook on the second side until golden also. Remove from the pan to a sheet of parchment and place a piece of kitchen paper over to soak up any excess fat. Repeat with the remaining mixture until you have at least 4 pancakes to wrap around the beef fillet. Leave to one side to cool.
- Flour a work surface and remove the puff pastry from the packet. Flour a rolling pin and begin rolling out the pastry to a rectangle 40cm x 30cm (15in x 1in). Transfer to a piece of parchment and a baking sheet and chill in the fridge until required.
- Remove the beef fillet from the fridge and brush 2 tablespoons of Dijon mustard all over the beef.
- On a sheet of parchment lay out 3 of the pancakes in a row, the length of the beef fillet plus enough to wrap up each end. Spread two thirds of the mushroom duxelles on the pancakes and place the fillet on top. Spread the remaining third of duxelles on the top of the beef and place the fourth pancake on top. Use the parchment to wrap the pancakes around the fillet and tuck the ends in. Wrap this tightly in clingfilm to hold everything firmly together and chill in the fridge for 30 minutes.
- Using the parchment, lift the pastry from the tray and place on a floured work surface. Depending on the size of your beef and its accompaniments you may need to further roll out the pastry so that there is an inch or so overlap once it’s wrapped around the beef. Round off the corners by cutting away the excess to stop the ends being too bulky when all wrapped up.
- Remove the beef from the fridge and discard the clingfilm wrap. Carefully unwrap the parchment, keeping the pancakes in place around the fillet. Place it in the centre of the pastry and begin to wrap everything up, starting with the long ends first. Make sure the pastry is wrapped tightly around the Wellington and seal all edges with a little egg wash. Next bring in the 2 ends, trimming any excess overlapping pastry if necessary, and seal these also with egg wash. Egg wash the outside and to decorate (optional) score the pastry lightly using the back of a paring knife to create a pattern of your choice. Use the sheet of parchment to transfer the whole thing back onto a medium baking sheet and chill for at least an hour in the fridge, or overnight if making ahead.
- Heat the oven to 220°C fan and place a baking sheet on the middle shelf to preheat.
- Remove the Wellington from the fridge and egg wash one more time. For an intense golden finish separate the yolk and mix with a dash of water and use this to paint on the final glaze.
- Use the parchment to transfer onto the preheated baking sheet and bake for 25 minutes until the pastry is beautifully golden and crispy and the temperature in the centre of the meat reaches 48°C. If it isn’t warm enough, reduce the oven temp to 200°C and continue cooking a bit longer.
- Once cooked, leave to rest for 20 minutes then slice to serve the perfect medium rare Wellington.
"I'm all about cooking from scratch using the best quality ingredients. When you know exactly what's gone into your food you want to make sure it's cooked perfectly. With the speed and accuracy of a Thermapen you know this is spot on every time."
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