The first time I screwed this up…
I dumped everything in the pot at once. No searing. No layering. Just beef, wine, herbs, and hope. What came out was winey, watery, and gray—a far cry from the glossy, rich Bourguignon I imagined.
I didn’t understand what Gordon meant when he said, “Color equals flavor.” Until I burned a batch of beef so badly trying to get color, I almost gave up on braising altogether.
But once I got it right? Game-changer. Deep, velvety sauce. Fall-apart beef. Smoky bacon. Silky mushrooms. And not a drop of blandness.
Here’s how I learned to make Beef Bourguignon like a tactician—not a guesser.
Why This Works (And Where Most Go Wrong)
This dish fails hard if you rush or skip the order of operations.
Most people:
- Don’t sear properly – pale beef = weak sauce
- Dump everything in cold – no wine reduction = thin, acidic liquid
- Forget to build – it’s a layered dish, not a dump stew
- Use cheap wine – bad idea (the alcohol cooks off, the flavor doesn’t)
Gordon’s version works because he stacks flavor in heat waves:
→ sear the beef
→ sweat the aromatics
→ reduce the wine
→ add fat (bacon), umami (mushrooms), and herbs
→ braise slow and low
→ then thicken for a silky finish
Ingredients That Actually Matter
- 900g beef chuck – marbled, not lean. It breaks down beautifully. Skip sirloin or stew meat—it dries out.
- Dry red wine (480ml) – Merlot, Pinot Noir, or Burgundy. Not sweet. Not cheap. Not optional.
- Beef broth (240ml) – adds roundness. Water won’t cut it.
- Bacon (225g) – smoky fat = complexity. I use slab bacon, diced thick.
- Mushrooms (450g) – whole, not sliced. They hold texture.
- Flour + butter – this makes the velvety sauce. No shortcuts here.
- Fresh thyme, rosemary, bay – real herbs, not dried. Freshness makes the difference.
- Mashed potatoes or crusty bread – non-negotiable for soaking up that sauce.
How To Make Gordon Ramsay Beef Bourguignon
Step 1: Preheat oven to 150°C / 300°F.
Low and slow is the only way.
Step 2: Season beef generously with salt and pepper.
Not a sprinkle—a full seasoning. You’re building the base.
Step 3: Sear the beef in olive oil over high heat (Dutch oven).
Don’t crowd the pan. Work in batches. Each cube needs deep, golden brown crust. This takes time. Don’t flip too early.
Step 4: Remove beef. In the same fat, sauté onion and garlic until translucent.
Scrape the fond. That’s gold. Don’t burn it.
Step 5: Add wine, broth, herbs. Bring to a boil.
Let the alcohol cook off—2–3 mins at a hard simmer. Smell it. If it still punches your nose, give it another minute.
Step 6: Return beef to the pot. Add bacon and whole mushrooms. Stir.
Don’t pre-cook the mushrooms—they’ll roast in the oven and stay juicy.
Step 7: Lid on. Into the oven for 2–2.5 hours.
You want fork-tender beef and a sauce that’s slightly reduced. Don’t open the oven every 10 minutes. Trust the time.
Step 8: Make the beurre manié (butter + flour) in a saucepan.
Whisk over medium heat for 1–2 mins until blond and nutty. Slowly ladle in 1 cup of braising liquid, whisking constantly. You want a smooth, creamy roux-thickened sauce.
Step 9: Pour thickened sauce back into pot. Stir gently to coat.
Simmer 5 more minutes on the stove if needed. Adjust salt.
Step 10: Rest 10 minutes before serving.
This lets the sauce settle and cling better. Don’t skip this.

What Gordon Ramsay Says About This Dish
“The wine isn’t just flavor—it’s the soul of the sauce.”
He’s right. Don’t use bad wine. I tried it once—tasted like sour juice.
“Color equals flavor.”
I ruined pans learning this. But once I nailed the sear? Whole dish leveled up.
“Don’t slice the mushrooms—leave them whole so they don’t vanish.”
Yes. They stay juicy and meaty, not rubbery.
“Let it rest before you serve.”
That 10 minutes changes the whole mouthfeel. Trust it.
What I Got Wrong (And How I Fixed It)
- Used cheap wine → sauce was bitter
- Skipped the thickening step → watery stew
- Sliced mushrooms → textureless blobs
- Crowded the pan while searing → gray meat
- Served it straight from the oven → too hot, sauce hadn’t set
Variations That Actually Hold Up
- Pearl onions – add them with mushrooms if you want extra sweetness
- Lamb shoulder – swaps well for beef if you braise for 3+ hrs
- No alcohol? – sub 1:1 with grape juice + balsamic vinegar + broth (not quite the same, but passable)
Don’t add carrots or potatoes here—this isn’t a pot roast.
Pro Tips That Change the Game
- Use a Dutch oven with a heavy lid – essential for even braising
- Use slab bacon or pancetta, not strips – better bite and fat rendering
- Let wine reduce for 3–5 mins before adding beef – crucial
- Reheat gently the next day – this dish improves after resting overnight
- If too salty, add a splash of water and simmer 5 mins to mellow it
Storage + Leftover Moves
- Fridge: 3 days airtight
- Freezer: Up to 3 months. Leave space in the container.
- Reheat: Medium-low heat on the stove. Add splash of broth if thickened too much.
Leftover ideas:
- Shred beef and stuff into grilled cheese
- Pour over baked potatoes with crème fraîche
- Fold into puff pastry for next-level hand pies
FAQs
Q: Can I use stew beef or sirloin?
A: Don’t. Stew beef is unpredictable, and sirloin gets dry. Use chuck or brisket.
Q: What wine does Gordon Ramsay use?
A: Usually Burgundy or Pinot Noir. I prefer Merlot for a fruitier, rounder base.
Q: Why is my sauce too thin?
A: You likely skipped the thickening step or didn’t reduce your wine enough.
Q: Can I make this in a slow cooker?
A: Yes—but sear everything first. Then cook on low 8 hrs. Finish on the stove with thickening.
Q: Can I skip the mushrooms?
A: Sure—but you’ll lose texture. Add pearl onions instead if you must.
Try More Recipes:
- Gordon Ramsay Bolognese Sausage Recipe
- Gordon Ramsay Sunday Roast Recipe
- Gordon Ramsay Shrimp Scampi Recipe
- Gordon Ramsay Creamy Mac And Cheese Recipe
Gordon Ramsay Beef Bourguignon Recipe
Course: DinnerCuisine: FrenchDifficulty: Easy6
servings20
minutes3
hours400
kcalTender beef, rich wine sauce, and smoky bacon come together in this ultimate comfort dish perfect for cold nights.
Ingredients
900g beef chuck, cubed
Salt and pepper
2 tbsp olive oil
1 large onion, chopped
3 garlic cloves, minced
480ml dry red wine (Merlot or Pinot Noir)
240ml beef broth
2 sprigs fresh thyme
2 sprigs fresh rosemary
1 bay leaf
225g bacon, diced
450g small white mushrooms
2 tbsp butter
2 tbsp all-purpose flour
Fresh parsley, chopped
Mashed potatoes or crusty bread
Directions
- Preheat oven to 150°C (300°F).
- Season beef with salt and pepper.
- Sear beef in oil until browned. Remove.
- Sauté onion and garlic.
- Add wine, broth, herbs. Boil 3 mins.
- Return beef. Add bacon, mushrooms.
- Cover and bake 2–2.5 hrs.
- In saucepan, melt butter. Stir in flour. Add 1 cup cooking liquid, whisk to thicken.
- Pour sauce into stew. Simmer 5 mins.
- Garnish with parsley. Rest 10 mins. Serve.
Notes
- Use a Dutch oven with a heavy lid – essential for even braising
- Use slab bacon or pancetta, not strips – better bite and fat rendering
- Let wine reduce for 3–5 mins before adding beef – crucial
- Reheat gently the next day – this dish improves after resting overnight
- If too salty, add a splash of water and simmer 5 mins to mellow it

I’m Ava Taylor. I’m A Self-taught Home Cook Who Loves Gordon Ramsay Recipes. I Try Every Dish In My Small Apartment Kitchen And Tweak It Until It Works. I Write Clear Steps With Simple Words So Anyone Can Follow. I Share Honest Wins, Mistakes, And Quick Tips To Help You Cook With Confidence.
