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Roast Beef Tenderloin with Port Sauce
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10 Servings
100% would make this recipe for Roast Beef Tenderloin with Port Sauce again.
Literally the 'filet mignon' of beef roasts, this is a fantastic dish for a formal or holiday meal.
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Roast Beef Tenderloin with Port Sauce Ingredients
Ingredients
Beef
:
1 fresh
rosemary
sprig
1 4- to 5-pound trimmed whole beef
tenderloin
tail end tucked under, tied every 3 inches
1 teaspoon coarsely cracked
black pepper
2 teaspoons coarse
kosher salt
1 cup ruby or tawny
Port
Sauce:
Simple Homemade Beef
Stock
4 tablespoons (1/2 stick) chilled unsalted
butter
, divided
Roasting:
1/4 cup finely chopped
shallot
s
2 tablespoons extra-virgin
olive oil
3 tablespoons Cognac or
brandy
2 tablespoons
black pepper
corns coarsely cracked in mortar with pestle or in resealable plastic
Instructions for Roast Beef Tenderloin with Port Sauce
For beef:
Sprinkle entire surface of beef tenderloin with coarse kosher salt. Place beef on rack set over large rimmed baking sheet. Refrigerate uncovered at least 24 hours and up to 36 hours.
For sauce:
Melt 2 tablespoons butter in large saucepan over medium-low heat. Add shallots; saut? until soft, 3 minutes. Add Cognac, rosemary, and 1 teaspoon cracked pepper and cook until liquid evaporates, 1 minute. Add Port; bring to simmer. Add all of beef stock. Boil until reduced to 1 1/2 cups, about 20 minutes. Strain into medium saucepan, pressing on solids to extract as much liquid as possible. Discard solids in strainer. DO AHEAD: Can be made 24 to 36 hours ahead. Cool slightly, then cover and chill.
For roasting:
Let beef stand at room temperature 1 hour before roasting. Position rack in center of oven and preheat to 425?F. Rub beef all over with oil; sprinkle with 2 tablespoons cracked peppercorns, pressing to adhere. Return beef to rack on baking sheet and roast until instant-read thermometer inserted into thickest part of meat registers 125?F for medium-rare (135?F to 140?F in thinnest part), about 30 minutes. Remove roast from oven and let rest 15 minutes.
Bring sauce to boil; whisk in remaining 2 tablespoons butter. Season sauce to taste with salt and pepper.
Cut off string from roast. Cut roast crosswise into 1/2-inch-thick slices; arrange on platter. Serve with sauce.
TEST-KITCHEN TIP: Salting in advance, also called dry brining, is often done to improve the texture of sinewy cuts of meat. But it also works magic on tender cuts, amping up flavor and juiciness. It sounds counterintuitive; for years the accepted wisdom was that pre-salting dries out meat. But the moderate salting you'll be doing here does the opposite. Water is first drawn out of the meat and then gets reabsorbed; this saltier, more flavorful moisture helps intensify taste. What's more, the exterior of the tenderloin dries out slightly, making it quicker to brown in the oven.
WHAT TO DRINK: Chateau Coufran 2003 (France, $23). The leathery, earthy notes and subtle fruit in this medium-bodied Bordeaux are perfect for the tenderloin.
My Notes: First made 11/18/07. Had to sub a burgandy cooking wine as it was Sunday and the package stores were closed. Seared over a hot oak/lump fire and then cooked indirect heat (400f) for a little over an hour until it registered 130f on the probe thermometer. Tender, delicious, excellent. Used some of the sauce to finish off some sauted 'baby bella' mushrooms. The sauce was a great dipping sauce, full of flavor, but to use as a true sauce, reduce it more next time. Also, the beef stock recipe yields 3 cups so you can substitute 3 cups of beef broth.
Main Ingredient:
Cuisine:
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Ingredient Insight - look inside this recipe
Beef
Black pepper
Brandy
Butter
Kosher Salt
Olive Oil
Port
Rosemary
Shallot
Tenderloin
Grill
Broil
Main Dish
Holiday
Christmas
Elegant
Expensive
for
flavor
and
categorization
sgrishka
An excellent recipe! The roast tenderloin turned out very tender, moist and flavorful. I've advanced salted or dry brined other less expensive cuts of beef before, but never a beef tenderloin. While I've always found tenderloins to be tender, I've also found them to be somewhat lacking in flavor. This technique does amp up (intensify) the flavor...greatly improving this excellent cut of beef.
YES, I would make this recipe again.
Active Time:; Start-to-Finish:
posted Dec 08, 2007 by
sgrishka
swibirun
[I made edits to this recipe.]
Active Time:; Start-to-Finish:
posted Nov 18, 2007 by
swibirun
swibirun
[I made edits to this recipe.]
Active Time:; Start-to-Finish:
posted Nov 18, 2007 by
swibirun
swibirun
[I posted this recipe.]
YES, I would make this recipe again.
Active Time:; Start-to-Finish:
posted Nov 18, 2007 by
swibirun
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