What To Do With A Whole Beef Tenderloin?

Elaine Margarett

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Should I cut it into steaks/fillets? That's where I'm leaning. I prefer a steak to a roast but I'm wondering if there are great recipes/ways to prepare it as a roast that I'm unaware of.

My dial-up is refusing to let me on allrecipes.com, my favorite recipe site, so I'm hoping we have cooks here who can offer suggestions.

Thanks!
 

alleycat

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Let's just see what beef tenderloin recipes are on allrecipes.com . . .

Back in a moment.
 

Haggis

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Beef Wellington.

I've never made it, but I've certainly eaten it. I'd kill for some right about now.

250px-Beef_Wellington_-_Crosscut.jpg
 

Maryn

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We roast it in a bit of olive oil, sea salt, and coarse-ground pepper. It's our Christmas dinner in recent years--since the kids are on their own, they can't afford quality meat like this. Hey, whatever gets them home for the holiday, right?

Beef Wellington is a lot of work, to me more than it's worth in terms of yum factor. Luckily my fancy-schmancy grocery store sells it ready to cook.

Maryn, not fancy-schmancy herself--she doesn't even wear her fur coat while shopping!
 

MaryMumsy

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You could do half as a roast and cut half into filets, depending on how many people you are serving at once. Like Maryn, just a little oil, salt, pepper, and maybe some garlic powder.

Big thing is to not overcook it. Anything past medium rare is likely to be dry. And let it rest after you take it out of the oven, before slicing. That lets the juices settle so they don't all run out with the first slice.

MM
coming to your house for dinner
 

shawkins

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Another vote for beef wellington. It's not hard to make and it presents really well. I think it also seems kinda Christmas-y. Careful though - I've cooked it more than I intended to a couple of times. Pull it out when the thermometer is reading a good bit under whatever level of doneness you're shooting for and let it rest for a few minutes. To me it seems like it continues to cook after you take it out even more than does a regular roast. Maybe the pastry acts as an insulator or something?
Beef Wellington said:
  • a 3 1/2-pound fillet of beef tied with thin sheets of larding fat at room temperature
  • 3/4 pound mushrooms, chopped fine
  • 2 1/2 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 1/2 pound pâté de foie gras (available at specialty foods shops) at room temperature
  • 1 pound puff paste or thawed frozen puff pastry plus additional for garnish if desired
  • 1 large egg white beaten
  • an egg wash made by beating 1 large egg yolk with 1 teaspoon of water
  • 1/2 cup Sercial Madeira
  • 2 teaspoons arrowroot dissolved in 1 teaspoon cold water
  • 1/2 cup beef broth
  • 2 tablespoons finely chopped black truffles (available at specialty food shops) if desired
  • watercress for garnish if desired

In a roasting pan roast the beef in the middle of a preheated 400°F oven for 25 to 30 minutes, or until the thermometer registers 120°F. Let the fillet cool completely and discard the larding fat and the strings. Skim the fat from the pan juices and reserve the pan juices.


In a heavy skillet cook the mushrooms in the butter over moderately low heat, stirring, until all the liquid they give off is evaporated and the mixture is dry, season them with salt and pepper, and let them cool completely. Spread the fillet evenly with the pâté de foie gras, covering the top and sides, and spread the mushrooms evenly over the pâté de foie gras. On a floured surface roll 1 pound of the puff paste into a rectangle about 20- by 12- inches, or large enough to enclose the fillet completely, invert the coated fillet carefully under the middle of the dough, and fold up the long sides of the dough to enclose the fillet brushing the edges of the dough with some of the egg white to seal them. Fold ends of the dough over the fillet and seal them with the remaining egg white. Transfer the fillet, seam side down to a jelly-roll pan or shallow roasting pan and brush the dough with some of the egg wash. Roll out the additional dough and cut the shapes with decorative cutters. Arrange the cutouts on the dough decoratively, brush them with the remaining egg wash, and chill the fillet for at least 1 hour and up to 2 hours. Bake the fillet in the middle of a preheated 400°F oven for 30 minutes, reduce the heat to 350°, and bake the fillet for 5 to 10 minutes more, or until the meat thermometer registers 130°F. for medium-rare meat and the pastry is cooked through. Let the fillet stand for 15 minutes.



In a saucepan boil the reserved pan juices and the Madeira until the mixture is reduced by one fourth. Add the arrowroot mixture, the broth, the truffles, and salt and pepper to taste and cook the sauce over moderate heat, stirring, being careful not to let it boil, for 5 minutes, or until it is thickened. Loosen the fillet from the jelly-roll pan, transfer it with two spatulas to a heated platter, and garnish it with watercress. Serve the fillet, cut into 3/4-inch-thick slices, with the sauce.
This one's pretty darn good as well: Beef tenderloin with shallots, bacon and port.

  • 1 1/2 pounds large shallots (about 24), halved lengthwise, peeled
  • 3 tablespoons olive oil
  • 6 cups canned beef broth
  • 1 1/2 cups tawny Port
  • 1 tablespoon tomato paste
  • 2 3- to 3 1/4-pound beef tenderloins (large ends), trimmed
  • 2 teaspoons dried thyme
  • 7 bacon slices, chopped
  • 6 tablespoons (3/4 stick) butter
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons all purpose flour
  • 1 large bunch watercress
Position rack in center of oven and preheat to 375°F. In 9-inch-diameter pie pan, toss shallots with oil to coat. Season with salt and pepper. Roast until shallots are deep brown and very tender, stirring occasionally, about 30 minutes.

Boil broth and Port in large saucepan until reduced to 3 3/4 cups, about 30 minutes. Whisk in tomato paste. (Shallots and broth mixture can be made 1 day ahead. Cover separately; chill.)

Pat beef dry; sprinkle with thyme, salt and pepper. In large roasting pan set over medium heat, sauté bacon until golden, about 4 minutes. Using slotted spoon, transfer bacon to paper towels. Add beef to pan; brown on all sides over medium-high heat, about 7 minutes. Transfer pan to oven; roast beef until meat thermometer inserted into center registers 125°F for medium-rare, about 45 minutes. Transfer beef to platter. Tent loosely with foil.

Spoon fat off top of pan drippings in roasting pan. Place roasting pan over high heat. Add broth mixture and bring to boil, scraping up any browned bits. Transfer to medium saucepan; bring to simmer. Mix 3 tablespoons butter and flour in small bowl to form smooth paste; whisk into broth mixture and simmer until sauce thickens, about 2 minutes. Whisk in 3 tablespoons butter. Stir in roasted shallots and reserved bacon. Season sauce with salt and pepper. Cut beef into 1/2-inch-thick slices. Spoon some sauce over. Garnish with watercress. Pass remaining sauce.
If you're shooting for off-the-charts awesome, I'd suggest you make the Wellington, but also do the port sauce as described in the second recipe and serve it on the side. I did that a couple of years ago and I caught my brother literally licking his plate clean.

Edit: Just thinking about that makes me hungry. The dogs & I were just debating what to do for Christmas dinner here at casa de shawkins. I think the matter is now settled.

Edit x2: I missed the part about your dialup being fussy. Posting actual recipes, not just links. (That's OK because recipes aren't copyrightable, yes?)
 
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Elaine Margarett

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Shawkins,

I'm printing your recipes. Thanks!:)

Alleycat, thanks for the links! For some reason I have no problem getting to the site thru your links and viewing the recipes; just can't move around allrecipes on my own. Grrrr.

Okay, I'm doing steaks but going to reserve one section for a roast. This is the first time I've bought an entire tenderloin but the price was too cheap to pass up. The individual fillets I saw looked pretty good so I'm hopeful the whole loin will be just as good.

I'm not making this for Christmas as we're going to my brother's house but my husband is coming home on Weds. for 2 weeks so that's reason enough for a celebration! WooHoo!
 

Maryn

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Aw, that's more that enough reason to celebrate! Enjoy.
 

Haggis

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I'm making lobstah stew. It's gonna be ready about 5ish. I'll consider sharing.
 

Elaine Margarett

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This thread and the Food Channel is making me hungry!

Okay, I have my menu. It will be herb-rubbed fillets with port wine sauce. (Love the beef wellington idea but will have to fix it later since I won't have time this go round.) Mashed potaoes with roasted garlic and maple-rosemary glazed carrots....or maybe roasted brussel sprouts. Hmmm

Oh, and my ritz cracker pecan pie for dessert.

Hubby, will certainly know how happy I am to see him. <g>
 

Elaine Margarett

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OH No! Forgot to Buy the Port!

Darn, I was at the liquor store yesterday stocking up for the holiday and forgot to buy the port!

Could I substitute a nice red wine for the port?

I can go back to the store if I have to, but was hoping to avoid the crush. :-(
 

alleycat

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You would probably want to use a sweet red wine, or add a little sugar to the recipe.

Got anything like Lambrusco?

If not, then just go with the red wine.
 
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Elaine Margarett

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You would probably want to use a sweet red wine, or add a little sugar to the recipe.

Got anything like Lambrusco?

If not, then just go with the red wine.

No, but that's a great tip for sugar. Any idea how much, or should I just sweeten to taste?
 

alleycat

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No idea. Maybe a tablespoon per cup of wine?

You might Google and see if there is any red wine for port advice.
 

Haggis

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Actually, a nice Burgundy, if you have it , probably wouldn't need any extra sugar at all. At most, a teaspoon.
 

alleycat

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Actually, a nice Burgundy, if you have it , probably wouldn't need any extra sugar at all. At most, a teaspoon.

Good point. With a hearty burgundy I might not even add any sugar.

I don't think it's all that important anyway whether red wine or port is used in a sauce like this.
 

Haggis

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Good point. With a hearty burgundy I might not even add any sugar.

I don't think it's all that important anyway whether red wine or port is used in a sauce like this.
Yeah. I mean, regardless of the kind of wine used, it's wine sauce. It's got to be good. Unless you used, you know, MD 20/20 or Ripple or something like that. :D
 

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I like Ripple as long as it's the Special Reserve Vintage--aged 12 days!