Mushroom Bourguignon
Ingredients:
1 T grapeseed oil
3 pounds fresh mushrooms – assorted types
1 T butter
1 T olive oil
2 tablespoon all purpose flour
1 cup chopped onion
1 carrot, finely chopped
4 large garlic cloves, chopped or pressed
2 cups good Burgundy wine
1 1/2 t thyme
¼ t fresh cracked black pepper or to taste
2 generous teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley
Directions with some notes on what I did:
Clean, stem, and cut the mushrooms into large chunks.
Heat the grapeseed oil over medium high heat in a large pan. When the pan is very hot, add the mushrooms and sear quickly removing as they start to turn brown. Depending on the size of your pan, you will want to do this in a couple batches. When you crowd things they don't tend to brown, just steam. They will begin to reduce a bit in size, so watch them carefully as they should not release all their juices and finish reducing. Place the pretty brown things in a bowl.
Clean, stem, and cut the mushrooms into large chunks.
Heat the grapeseed oil over medium high heat in a large pan. When the pan is very hot, add the mushrooms and sear quickly removing as they start to turn brown. Depending on the size of your pan, you will want to do this in a couple batches. When you crowd things they don't tend to brown, just steam. They will begin to reduce a bit in size, so watch them carefully as they should not release all their juices and finish reducing. Place the pretty brown things in a bowl.
In a large heavy saucepan, place the butter and pure olive oil and heat over medium. Saute the carrot and onion until the onion is soft and the carrot begins to soften, add the garlic and saute for another couple minutes. Add the flour and stir quickly to incorporate.
Add mushrooms and stir. Add wine, broth, onion mix, all seasonings, and the Worcestershire sauce, stir until well mixed, and bring to a simmer.
Cook over low heat until mushrooms are tender and sauce thickens and deepens in color, stirring occasionally for about 40 minutes.
Taste and adjust seasonings. I kept mine simple so the flavor of the mushrooms stayed prominent. You may prefer a more complex dish, if so, get creative with the flavors you love.
Stir in parsley and serve.
Notes on the great flexibility of this recipe:
Great over egg noodles, rice, mashed potatoes, on top of slices of baguette toasty with melted Swiss cheese, in a tortilla, or simply speared with each piece of a very good steak. Another wonderful idea for this is to add beef broth to thin it a bit and add seared chunks of lamb to make a lamb stew.
If you don't cook with wine, just use beef broth! If you are a vegetarian, use veggie broth.
If you don't cook with butter, use just the pure olive oil in the second saute.
Want the complete bourguignon experience? Skip the chopped onion and dump in some frozen or fresh pearl onions when you add the wine and seasonings.
Notes on the great flexibility of this recipe:
Great over egg noodles, rice, mashed potatoes, on top of slices of baguette toasty with melted Swiss cheese, in a tortilla, or simply speared with each piece of a very good steak. Another wonderful idea for this is to add beef broth to thin it a bit and add seared chunks of lamb to make a lamb stew.
If you don't cook with wine, just use beef broth! If you are a vegetarian, use veggie broth.
If you don't cook with butter, use just the pure olive oil in the second saute.
Want the complete bourguignon experience? Skip the chopped onion and dump in some frozen or fresh pearl onions when you add the wine and seasonings.
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