This Swiss Steak is FLAVOR BOMB of Goodness
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- Опубліковано 7 чер 2024
- This delicious, easy-to-make Swiss steak recipe with slow-braised beef in tomatoes and vegetables is the ultimate comfort food. You will be blown away by the simplicity of this dish and the amazing flavors it has.
Ingredients for this recipe:
• 2-pound top round steak
• 1 cup all-purpose flour
• 3 tablespoons olive oil
• 2 peeled thickly sliced yellow onions
• 5 thickly sliced ribs of celery
• 1 large peeled cut in half thickly sliced carrot
• 4 finely minced garlic cloves
• 1 ½ cups beef stock
• 28-ounce can of whole peeled tomatoes, no juice
• 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
• coarse salt and fresh cracked pepper to taste
Serves 4
Prep time: 25 minutes
Cook time: 2 hours
Procedures:
1. Start by cutting the steak into 4 individual pieces that are roughly 8 ounces each. If you want smaller pieces of steak, cut each 8-ounce piece in half again so that there are 8 4-ounce pieces.
2. Next, using a swissing tool, pierce the meat on all sides. You can also use a fork to do this.
3. Place the swissed steaks into a plastic zip bag and pound using a mallet until it is about ¼” to ½” thick.
4. Set the steak on a sheet tray lined with parchment paper and generously season on both sides with salt and pepper.
5. In the meantime, prepare the onions, celery, carrots, and garlic.
6. In a wide shallow bowl or a 9” cake tin, mix together the flour and salt.
7. Dredge the steak on both sides in the flour and place it back on the sheet tray with parchment paper.
8. Next, heat the oil in a large 6-quart rondeau or sauce pot over high heat until it begins to smoke lightly.
9. Add in the steak, turn the heat down to medium, and sear for 3 to 4 minutes per side or until well browned on both sides. You may need to do this in batches.
10. Set the steak to the side on a plate, and then add the onions to the pot and lightly caramelize over low heat for 25 to 30 minutes while occasionally stirring.
11. Once browned, add in the celery and carrots and sauté for medium heat for 3 to 4 minutes or until they begin to lightly brown.
12. Stir in the garlic and cook for 30 to 45 seconds or until fragrant. Season with vegetables with salt.
13. Deglaze with beef stock and add in the hand-crushed whole peeled tomatoes.
14. Season with Worcestershire sauce, salt, and pepper.
15. Add back in the steak, cover the pot, and cook over low heat for 2 to 2 hours and 15 minutes or until the steak is fork tender.
16. Garnish with optional finely minced parsley and serve. - Навчання та стиль
That's very close to the way my mother made Swiss steak, back in the 60s-70s. Looks delicious! ❤
I made this for dinner and it was AMAZING! Followed the recipe exactly, but sides were mashed potatoes and broccoli (what I had on hand). Husband and son rated it a 10! Thank you very much for such a great recipe.
I made this today along with some homemade mashed potatoes. The swiss steak turned out great but the creamed corn... Oh wow, everyone LOVED it. I'll be making that as a side dish again very soon. Thank you for taking the time to share the content you do!
Love this recipe. I too used to make it many years ago. Thank you for bringing it back.
Man you got me jonesin for some Swiss steak.
Thanks very much for posting this. I picked up a couple of cheap "outside round" (Canada) steaks that realized were likely to be really tough... but some searching around turned up recipes for Swiss Steak. I also realized that I have been mixing up Swiss steak and Salisbury steak for the last 5 or 6 decades and had never made Swiss Steak before.
Only changes I made were based on what I had - jalapeno pepper instead of celery, garlic powder instead of real thing, fresh tomatoes instead of canned - but the result was extraordinary. I probably could have thrown out the steak and just eaten the gravy (yes it was that good) but after a bit over an hour of simmering the steak was already tender enough as long as I cut across the grain. I was only eating one of the four pieces tonight so I'm letting the other three cool in the gravy and will see how they reheat tomorrow.
Hello Chef Parisi, your videos explain what makes the food taste better. The font,, Mayard , reaction, and so The fone, Mal The fone, Mallar, reaction and so much more. The best culinary instructor. You explain if you cook, feel the love of it, and watch every detail. So well done. Best Regards.
DUDE, this looks AMAZING!!!
That's one decadent Sunday supper! My mother made Swiss Steak with either round steak or a blade roast. She never used tomato though, it was always a brown gravy. I miss you, Mom! I've never made creamed corn before and that addition of crispy lardons was fabulous food porn!
This is an amazing recipe. Full of flavor and so very tender. I only had 3 cloves of garlic but it still worked well! Oh I also used sweet Vidalia onions. I always use these.
I'm so happy you made this recipe!! My mom made Swiss Steak for us growing up and it was my favorite dish. It's interesting though because she didn't use carrots or celery, but used corn as the other vegetable in the sauce with the tomatoes, onions and garlic. So to see it cooked a slightly different way (looks delicious!) and creamed corn as the side dish is perfect! Thank you!
I enjoy cooking and I enjoy watching you cook. You cook how I like to eat. Much love.
Hi Chief I’ve been watching you for over a year but I was watching on FB . I love that I’ve found you on UA-cam it’s easier for me.. Thanks from Fishers Indiana 🤗🙏
You never cease to amaze, Chef Parisi.
Absolutely amazing dish! So worth the effort and time! Just finished eating it with my family. Everyone loved it, even the pickiest on all eaters! Thank you, Chef Billy!! One more treasure in my recipe book!
Many thanks! Appreciate you trying it
@@ChefBillyParisi Thank You for sharing it!
Love It Billy!! Greetings From Detroit!
Ur right. Cooking IS fun. I’m at work on Friday ready to head to the grocery stores for ingredients and prep for weekend meals- your shakshuka recipe and a separate frijoles blancos recipe.
Gosh, I haven't had Swiss Steak since I was a kid, and I'm not sure why. It's delicious!! Thanks for the reminder.
If you wanna take the cream corn to the next level, chop up the cobs and simmer them in water for half an hour or so, reduce the liquid to 1 cup and use the corn stock instead of milk.
Wowww.. lookin so good n yummy..😊😂
I cheat I use cube steaks and a crock pot to finish after sauté all the ingredients.. I also add 1 can of rotella tomatoes and peppers. Love it
Looks very tasty. My husband would really love this. I used to make my swiss steak from round steak. It is getting harder and harder to find round steak around my area so I have switched over to cube steak. Round steak has a deeper, richer flavor but since it was harder to find we just have to live with it. Cube steak does not require a longer cooking time. I live in a small community and the bigger stores are more than 30 miles away.
I have a local butcher and have them cube any cut I ask for. It’s great I get cubed top or bottom round steaks as well as cubed flank steak..
Thank you...
I've always used red wine, I'm going to try worcestershire sauce next time. I usually add some tomato paste as well when I add the san marzano tomatoes.
The chore is the aftermath of cooking which is the doing the cleaning up of the pots and dishes. lol.
I actually enjoy that part. It’s quiet, it’s soothing. It’s like the cool down after a workout.
All real food cooking makes a lot of clean up
When I was a kid my mom’s Swiss steak had a round bone in it. You can’t find that cut any longer. I think mashed potatoes goes best with steak due to the gravy. This did look delicious.
I always thought commis was chef slang for cooking homies
Well, it kind of is. Commis a French term for chef in training combined with homies. I’m a 80’s - 90’s kid.
Commis means clerk in french, un commis de cuisine is a kitchen clerk, anyonenunder the chef and sous chef. The word has the same root as commissaire or commissioner, even related to commit.
Chef - do you think that a Crockpot can be used to finish up the meat and sauce?
I roast my corn cobs to dark golden in color and add one or two to my chicken stock.
It really gives a nice, corn sweetness and toasty flavor.
Great for chicken tortilla soup.
I always get my wife’s affirmations after I know I made a bomb ass meal too lol
A tablespoon of vinager and 2 tbsp sugar takes it to the next level. Bit of red dry wine too.
My mom always served it over egg noodles or white rice.
What would be the UK equivalent of top round?
Most likely, topside. 😊
I only have carrots and onions. Is that going to be okay?
vewry interesting haven't heard of it
My mom always made creamed corn. Creamy, salty, not sweet. Corn is too sweet these days. I did make the steak though very delicious.
This is a great recipe. However, instead of cooking it on the stove for 2 hours, I used my Instant Pot. Next time I will use a trivet inside the IP to keep the steaks from breaking apart. It was delicious.
Just tried this using chuck roast and it was excellent. I browned the meat in two batches and had a problem with fond burning by the time the second batch was complete. Fond was black and bitter, so I wiped out the pan before proceeding with vegetables. In reviewing the video again, I can see at the 4:00 mark the fond is black. Any guidance from anybody?
I’d adjust your heat a bit. Black isn’t the end of the world, scorched is.
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I go with rice or potato.thank you .
Can you easily modify this into Beef with Hungarian Sauce?
No green/red peppers??
Same flavor for all dishes
Looks great, but not an English dish! Love your videos...have really improved my cooking.
Serious question, why does every UA-cam cook have the same white kitchen?
Check out Daddy Jack Chaplin cooking with the blues. You will thank me, I promise.
It's crazy oversalted! Salt, salt, salt!
Season to taste does not mean over salted, it means properly seasoned. Now if you want to use less or cake it on there, that’s up to you.
You are in control of the salt.
How on earth do you expect me or anyone to afford a piece of meat like that, it’s a complete joke.
It’s top round, it’s still on the very affordable side of beef. I think it was 18-20 for that piece of meat.
@@ChefBillyParisiSorry for the comment. I live in North Cornwall and meat is pretty expensive, going through some difficulties but this is no excuse for writing something so flippant. Thank you for your video. (I will delete my comment soon).
If it helps, this is a recipe for taking the cheapest cuts of beef you can find and turning them into something delicious and tender.
But yeah, even the cheapest cuts are expensive these days. What I can say though is that I made this with a pack of two outside round steaks for less than $10 while similarly sized packs of more common steaks were $30 or more. Before the long slow cook the steaks were really (really) tough, but when finished they were as tender as you could want.
Great video from Chef, as always. Trump 2024, Never Surrender!
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