Wednesday, 11 January 2012

Sluttishly Savoury: Beef and Chestnut Pie


Elizabeth is poorly today so instead of her sharing a fantastic chicken recipe, she's off to bed with Lemsip and a DVD boxed set and I get to share my beef and chestnut pie recipe with you. It's not strictly a pie and pie pedants purists will no doubt tell me off for calling it one. It's really a stew with a puff pastry hat.

If all hats were made of pastry the world would be a much better place.

Chestnuts were a bit of a whim, as I remembered that I had a vacuum pack in the cupboard that I meant to use at Christmas. Usually I'd have put them with white meat, but they worked perfectly, soaking up red wine like a nutty, boozy sponge. This is a pie that punches you in the face. Frankly I wouldn't want anything else from my food in January.

You'll need:
  • 500g stewing steak
  • 300g Portobello mushrooms, chopped (you probably don't need this many mushrooms, but you try telling me to curb my mushroom use)
  • 3 shallots, finely chopped
  • two cloves of garlic
  • 1/2 bottle of red wine
  • cup of beef stock (I mean an actual cup, I used one that had an Isle of Wight map on it)
  • 1 vacuum pack of chestnuts (you can buy these in most supermarkets, loitering by the packs of stuffing)
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 1 packet of puff pastry
Make it!
  • Brown the meat in a pan with some oil and seasoning, then add the shallots and mushrooms and garlic. 
  • Once that's all smelling brilliant, throw over the wine.
  • Pop the vacuum pack into hot water for a few minutes (save the water, it's what you'll use to make the stock). Once they've softened, add them to the pan.
  • Mix everything up a bit and turn it town to a low heat. Add the beef stock and bay leaves and leave it alone for about an hour and a half, maybe stirring and trying as you go along. Maybe another 45 minutes if your steak is still a little tough.
  • Put your mixture in a pie dish (leave a good half inch, otherwise you'll get gravy all over your oven)  and roll out your puff pastry to size. Then pop in a preheated oven for about 30-40 minutes until you've not nice golden brown pastry tops. 
  • The best thing about cooking your mixture this was is that you don't need to use it all in one pie - I had some topped with mash on Sunday. Use as much as you need and freeze the rest, or make mini pies for everyone.
  • Or, you could just dish it all up in a bowl and polish off the rest of the red wine.
Flickr image from Gimme Food :-)'s photostream.

3 comments:

  1. Mmm sounds nice. Funnily enough I chucked a left over handful of chestnuts in a beef stew last week (on whim, as you do) and they worked perfectly!

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  2. That sounds yummy, will have to keep an eye out for some chestnuts!

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  3. Made this last night yummy! Rather than the bay leaf I threw in a tablespoon of Easy Tasty Magic's "on the game" and it worked really well yum!

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