Tonight is my sweetie’s last night in KL before HIS official
move to Cairo. I’ll stay on a little
longer to organize the packing up and prepare for Christmas here with elder and younger daughters. Also, he sold his own car today, which he
loved, so tonight called for a special compensatory meal. We were given some filet mignon a few weeks
back, which was just hanging out in the already too-full freezer so Beef
Wellington came to mind.
Ingredients
25g (or about three tablespoons once they are minced) shallots
25g (or about three tablespoons once they are minced) shallots
35g or 2 1/2 tablespoons butter
125g or 4.5 oz button mushrooms
2 sheets butter puff pastry
2 filet mignon steaks (150-160g or 5.3-5.6 oz each)
1/2 cup or 120ml dry white wine
1/2 cup or 120ml cream
1/2 chicken stock cube
90g or 3.2 oz fine pork or duck liver pâté or mousse
Sea salt
Black pepper
1 egg for the egg wash
Method
Finely chop the shallots and mushrooms. Sauté gently with the butter until the
mushrooms are cooked down and then the liquid is almost all gone.
Add the 1/2 cup white wine and simmer again.
Meanwhile, dry off the steaks and sear them for one minute
on each side in a very hot pan. Put them
back in the refrigerator to chill.
Remove your puff pastry sheets from the freezer and thaw in
the refrigerator.
Once almost all the liquid is gone again in the mushroom
pan, add the 1/2 cup of thick cream, the 1/2 chicken stock cube, a few good
grinds of fresh black pepper, and simmer.
When it is very dry once more, remove from the heat and
chill in the refrigerator.
Cut your pâté into two equal pieces. Keep chilled until
ready to assemble the Wellingtons. Or the Beefs. I don't know how to shorten the name. Let's go with Wellingtons.
To assemble the Wellingtons:
Put a piece of cling wrap straight on your counter top. Put the thawed puff pasty on top of
this. Pull off the plastic that
separates the puff pastry squares.
In a small bowl, beat your egg and add a little bit of water
to make an egg wash. Brush the egg wash
all over the pastry square.
Add half of the mushroom mixture (formally known as duxelles
– why Beef Wellington, the quintessential English dish should have a French
sub-ingredient, who knows? I object so I will continue to call it the mushroom
mixture. Just didn’t want my readers to
remain in the dark.) in the middle of the pastry.
Pop the steak on top and give it a gentle push down into the
mushroom mixture. Give it a good sprinkle of salt and pepper.
Top the steak with the pâté.
Start folding in the pastry, corner by corner, getting it as
tight as you can, with as little air as you can manage between the pastry and
the meat.
Transfer them, using your cling film, to a
baking pan. Brush the little Wellingtons with your egg wash.
These can be kept in the refrigerator for an hour or two,
until you are ready to bake them.
When you are ready to bake, preheat your oven to 425°F
or 220°C. Put your baking tray into the oven and set
the timer for 20 minutes.
After 20 minutes, test the steaks inside with an instant read
thermometer. Rare should read around 130° or 54°C,
medium rare up to 140° or 60°C, medium up to 150° or 65°C. If you cook tenderloin more than that, I
don’t want to know about it. :)
Serve with red wine sauce
(As you will notice, I used just the red wine sauce recipe here.) and the
roasted vegetable of your choice.
Enjoy!