Because I've gotten a few comments/questions regarding the Cotes Du Rhone in this video, I should have been more clear. Seriously, it's my fault. Yes, a wine from the Burgundy region is really a priority, given the name is beef Burgundy. However, the person who made this famous in the book Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Julia Child, says it should be made with a full-bodied young red wine and lists these options: Beaujolais, Côtes du Rhône, Bordeaux Saint-Émilion, Burgundy, or a Chianti. My personal belief is that cooking doesn't need to be so prescriptive every single time. In fact, most classical dishes were based on what was available, in season, able to afford, and how to make it delicious. If anyone would be able to tell the grape used in this final presentation, you should immediately open a restaurant because you have an insane palate. I really do appreciate the kind words and support to this video. God bless.
@zaniwoob28 күн бұрын
Heresy is not native to the art of cooking. It is but a contrivance, all things can be conjoined.
@mynameisnotcory28 күн бұрын
Try it with a temperanillo, an oregon pinot, you’ll be ok 😎
@whartonitec104128 күн бұрын
I would Blanche first. Those blood are toxic bc how they were killed.
@TrevorAnthonyBand28 күн бұрын
YES! Exactly this with an emphasis on "how to make it delicious!"
@Billyjoe_Patriot23 күн бұрын
It doesn't matter wich type of red wine you use as it's gonna cook for hours, as long as it is dry and good enough to be drank, even a Merlot is fine.
@christianjambou8208Ай бұрын
Growing up in a very modest family in France. I never realized that we ate gourmet food on a daily basis...
@rolisingh142528 күн бұрын
😂
@berniemiller121728 күн бұрын
Isn't that the story of history itself. Poor people like us, making due with what we have and in time it becomes food for the elite. This stew Borscht Corned beef and cabbage and the list goes on.
@xpkareem28 күн бұрын
Gourmet food is just good food. Who doesn't like good food?
@AlphaMachina28 күн бұрын
The poboy, filé gumbo, jambalaya, étouffée over rice.. all dishes originally for the poor man. Now a poboy is $18 a sandwich if you're lucky, and if you want some good gumbo, you're gonna pay for it. What a shame when good, homecooked food like in the video costs so much most people can only do it once or twice a month if they're lucky, so the poor folks today eat mostly processed foods. This is a sad, sad world.
@harold939428 күн бұрын
@@AlphaMachinajust like oxtails.
@riverrock335Ай бұрын
Okay, I live in Alaska and spent $90 to make this stew today. I spent hours making this stew. Sadly, my meat was too fatty so I am cooling the stew on my back porch-in the freezing weather to solidify the fat and skim it off. I hope the stew can be salvaged. I decided to cook this before the holidays and I am glad I did as I would be very upset if I had to serve this to guests. I will let you know if it’s worth eating later today. Update: fat solidified overnight and I skimmed it off with a fine mesh shimmer. Worked like magic and the stew flavor fabulous. Looking back, I think I rushed the draining of fat off the pork belly. Lesson learned the hard way. My thanks to all of you who left helpful comments.
@janandersen8735Ай бұрын
It will be fine, in fact it is even better reheated next day. Also, frozen pearl onions are just as good and much easier. Lastly, if it is your first time braising, if the meat is tender after 2 and half hours, just keep checking every 15 minutes after that.
@michaelkingsbury4305Ай бұрын
It might be better up there with muskox or moose.
@briand2614Ай бұрын
My grandmother was given Moose by her neighbor when we were kids. She used it to make a stew, then didn’t tell us what it was until after we had eaten it. 😅 It was great, we had no idea.
@popsicle_907Ай бұрын
Glad it worked out well. I love this recipe. I also love AK. I born there when it was still a territory and only moved to the lower 48 on 2013. It'll always be home to me.
@randysusano2828Ай бұрын
awsome man,, food feeds not only the stomachbut the hheartsand souls of our loveones injoy the comapany you have God bless you Man.
@artemisxw870815 күн бұрын
After moving out of home this was one of the first dishes I learned to make. A lot of steps but it was well worth it. It was also the dish I made for my then boyfriend and now husband, I swear it stole his heart.
@adrianaslund8605Ай бұрын
Once made this while completely wasted and following a recipe and was shocked by how well it turned out.
@graemekinder949127 күн бұрын
Thanks for the advice Adrian. I will make sure I'm suitably wasted before attempting this recipe.
@RazaSid27 күн бұрын
Wasted on good burgundy wine preferably 😅
@JP-ee2tc17 күн бұрын
I never approach the stove or even the pantry until I'm 2-3 glasses in.
@jreese4621 күн бұрын
My Lord, this looks good. Why did I watch this late at night?
@dponzi5618 күн бұрын
Ive been making Julia's recipe a couple times a year for about 20 years. Everyone loves it, including my brother who hates most everything. Someone once gave me a venison roast, and I made Bambi bourguignon:) It was fantastic.
@germpore15 күн бұрын
The venison version is very traditional in Alsace and Germany. In Strasbourg I had a wonderful “civet de biche” and in Heidelberg, I had a likewise wonderful “wildragout”. Both times, served with spaetzle. Looking up recipes under these names, they’re basically variations on boeuf bourguignon, though notably, all the recipes I’ve seen with venison also add juniper berries.
@darkoresnik75Ай бұрын
I just made this. My kitchen looked like a hurricane had struck, but it was worth it. This is really a 2 day recipe, especially if you make beef broth and marinade. Yes this recipe really does benefit from an entire bottle of wine. The sauce turned out fantastic. This dish is definitely one that i need ro practice to get proficient at. It isn't one you can just decide to do at rhe last minute, but tyou will be rewarded for your efforts.
@InXLsisDeoАй бұрын
It is indeed a 2 days recipe. It's totally worth starting the day before. And make enough to eat twice, because it's even better when it's reheated. Trust me, I'm french 😊
@TrevorAnthonyBand28 күн бұрын
agree, most absolutely!
@No_nosay13 күн бұрын
Well, any red work I have a bottle of red wine
@No_nosay13 күн бұрын
Well, any red work I have a bottle of red wine. I will not add pork but I do have turkey bacon?
@darkoresnik7513 күн бұрын
@@No_nosayI'd avoid sweet wines. If it's a red you'd drink then go for it. I've substituted wines in recipes with good results as long as they are roughly the same dryness or sweetness that the recipe calls for. There's no point in using turkey bacon. It's not a substitute for the fat and flavor of real bacon. I love bacon, but I didn't use it in the recipe because I forgot to buy some and it still came out fantastic.
@mtkoslowski28 күн бұрын
This is clearly the most unctuous meal, the preparation of which I have ever watched. I am drooling…
@TheClBlues25 күн бұрын
Hi Chef ! Here in the south of France we usually add some quarters of unpeeled orange to the marinade, those quarter won't be cooked later, you will drop them off when getting marinade out of the fridge. Alain Ducasse (⭐⭐⭐) is also doing so… 😜
@judithryan78318 күн бұрын
So I’d call that a Daube de Boeuf Provinçale, using fennel instead of celery and maybe onion instead of leek. We add homemade fresh herbes de Provence and real black olives with the orange peel. But the technique is the same.
@M4RCi9229 күн бұрын
Boeuf Bourgignon is an absolute nuclear bomb of flavor, it's the perfect comfort dish. Savory, fatty, juicy, warm, filling mass pleaser. The best thing France has ever done.
@chrisbundy610429 күн бұрын
Coq au vin?
@unclestusoutdoorworld29 күн бұрын
I'd be happy to judge that competition! @@chrisbundy6104
@lanilaura9017 күн бұрын
@@chrisbundy6104Coq au vin is a no..
@dip4fish11 күн бұрын
Tour Eiffel, vaccination, 2cv, Concorde, tgv, french kiss?
@TemplarX29 күн бұрын
You got to be joking or you know nothing about French food.
@TrevorAnthonyBandАй бұрын
I didn't have any beef or mushrooms. Yesterday, I had just seasoned a batch of chicken thighs for baking. Then your video popped in my feed. YIKES. Grabbed the thighs, chopped the veggies, poured the wine and placed in the refrigerator for overnight marinating. Today, Sunday, I TOTALLY used your video/recipe as the base for my Sunday afternoon chicken dinner. Mashed up some lovely locally-grown potatoes (we're in Connecticut), and WOW WOW WOW WOW. And, BONUS: we had a baguette in the house for when we came back for seconds later in the day. WOW and, yes, WOW. THANK YOU!!!
@ChefBillyParisiАй бұрын
Couldn’t love this more! Nice on making it work with what you had on hand!
@-AtomsPhere-Ай бұрын
I can’t picture this with chicken.. you got me curious now
@UrsulaKele-ic5bbАй бұрын
For chicken you need to use white wine !
@JHBG1971Ай бұрын
You made a Cocq Au Vin
@unclestusoutdoorworld29 күн бұрын
Did you use beef stock or chicken stock? I admire the deft adaptation!
@victoria294414 күн бұрын
Made this for Christmas dinner. It was outstanding. Followed recipe exactly except used Extra thick sliced bacon and a Pinot from CA. Couldn’t have turned out better!
@onerainidayАй бұрын
Thank you for sharing your recipes, techniques, and step-by-step instructions.
@WalidChaar12 сағат бұрын
It's good to see a chef again who is not ashamed of his clean hands and does NOT wear gloves 🙂
@SistaChicАй бұрын
It's one of my favorite stews. I've never served it without people telling me how excellent it is. I have been using Julia's recipe but I'll give this one a try. The only thing missing is a batch of crusty rolls. TFS!
@Osk948 күн бұрын
I made this yesterday for four people for New Year's Eve and it was by far the most delicious dish I've ever managed to cook. Absolutely amazing, especially mopping up the sauce with some crusty bread.
@ericcutler5463Ай бұрын
Finally! I have been looking for a recipe like this for a long time. Thank you my friend!
@ChefBillyParisiАй бұрын
My pleasure! Thanks for watching!
@joaniemarjoriemarriott3422 күн бұрын
Great to share the small onion skinning technique, wonderfully easy.
@haha2004200329 күн бұрын
Vietnam was a French colony. We have a beef stew with carrots. One of my favorite dish. Should try it.
@Antzzz_Manzzz26 күн бұрын
Thit Bo kho ❤
@romain627526 күн бұрын
Boeuf aux carottes. This is a famous recipe in France.
@PangurBan-l1s20 күн бұрын
There was a popular UK Music Hall song called: “Boiled Beef and Carrots “
@thursdayschild80399 күн бұрын
I made this last night for my in-laws. WAY LONGER THAN 3 HOURS (for a novice). Anyway, it was still AMAZING. Incredible, incredible recipe, but beware it will probably take you all day + prep the day before.
@FC2ESWS28 күн бұрын
Looks amazing! I swear I could smell it while you were cooking.
@linzarzar699220 күн бұрын
I can taste it upon watching, the best cooking method I've seen. Thank you!
@popsicle_907Ай бұрын
This is a FANTASTIC VIDEO, all the way around...it's so well done.
@ryantruner699828 күн бұрын
Pretty pretty good 🎉
@popsicle_90726 күн бұрын
@ryantruner6998 is that you Larry David? 😄 🤣 Pretty Pretty Good
@kentfritzel707414 күн бұрын
I made this with the foundation of your beef bone broth (42 hour simmer!) and it was outrageously awesome. So Decadent and the lemon at the end is truly inspired. Thank you, Chef... this expanded my skills a lot and was ambrosia to eat.
@sonnicmanАй бұрын
I just made this, and it was awesome. I did the whole nine yards! I made it with the pasta AND the baby potatoes, and then I sopped up the sauce with a baguette.
@judithryan78318 күн бұрын
Wow wow wow! My mouth is watering just watching you prepare this stew!
@jklphotoАй бұрын
Another Master Class! One of our favorites. And yes, love Julia's recipe too!
@RealMikePannone15 күн бұрын
Hey Billy, I made this today for Christmas dinner. Really delicious dish. I did short ribs and sautéed new potatoes. Thanks, it was a hit. Merry Christmas!
@BerkanaАй бұрын
Chef Billy, at 4:06, I see you're using a small ladle to skim the foam off. I recommend using one of those Asian style ultra fine mesh foam scum skimmers. They work a lot better at removing foam while letting the liquid drip back in so you lose as little of that delicious liquid as possible.
@propertiesbyreginaldsmith27 күн бұрын
what to we do with the leftover stock?
@juliennapoliАй бұрын
Your recipe is a credit to French cuisine, Merci beaucoup !
@alexauga14 күн бұрын
I never thought ppl would obsess over bœuf bourguignon, French cuisine has so much better to offer
@ollehemmendorff213411 күн бұрын
Indeed, but people love their simple comfort foods.
@marcbuisson24634 күн бұрын
We do have much to offer, but don't be mean towards what stays an incredible stew and family dish if you don't want to receive angry comments from french people with incredible memories with it èwé
@davidhunternyc1Ай бұрын
This might be my Christmas Dinner this year! Yum.
@TrevorAnthonyBand28 күн бұрын
I have a turkey planned for Christmas, but I'm definitely doing this for the next friends dinner. For. Sure.
@angelaisland40366 күн бұрын
Love the history shared with recipe! You are the best instructor!
@stevefambro189Ай бұрын
Massive props on on the style and production quality of this video. Well done and fun to watch!
@2good2oftenАй бұрын
Thanks!
@XEEEEM28 күн бұрын
I cooked this for my friend and they wouldn’t leave afterward…. I have a wife now.
@N.C.-wo3ey27 күн бұрын
Just learn your lesson 😂
@rythmicwarrior26 күн бұрын
Well done bro!
@spaceskipster441214 күн бұрын
❤💍🤣
@wisherone5 күн бұрын
Oh wow! I watched this like . . . 3 times and thought it would be great but was too much work. Then I challenged myself and did it. Oh my God! Yes, most delicious stew . . . Maybe most delicious dish I ever had in my life! BUT this is like a once in a year sort of thing. Thanks chef!
@Godschild52909Ай бұрын
I've made this dish many times, however, this recipe is fantastic. I'll be trying this for my dinner guests over Christmas 😊
@aaronoconnell159728 күн бұрын
The beautiful thing is if you make it the day before it tastes even better all you got to do is throw a pot on the stoveon the day. What a perfect dish
@davidwilson215617 күн бұрын
Made this for a family meal for 6. Wow! Stunning - thank you.
@robinstacpoole2667Ай бұрын
Managing that almost impossible balance of great approachable food, easy to follow, presented in a friendly approachable manner without wasting my time. Oh, and did I say it looks like great food? That bit is quite important,
@nitanice6 күн бұрын
I often serve with this sort of dish angel hair that's first sauteed in butter until it browns, the just cover it with a rich beef stock to cook. Pairs well with beef.
@TVHouseHistorianАй бұрын
Making dinner for friends tonight, and this looks PRECISELY what the doctor ordered for a freezing cold end-of-Autumn's evening. Unfortunately, the marinade stage of the recipe requires I make this another night. This dish has to be perfect or don't even bother. Thanks for the wonderful recipe idea!!!!
@nikkithuillier551928 күн бұрын
Fabulous, I can't wait to try this. Thank you!
@trdfrguson007Ай бұрын
I have made this dish many times with vastly less fuss using the recipe in Anthony Bourdain’s techniques video and it always turns out great.
@ChefBillyParisiАй бұрын
If it ain’t broke don’t fix it.
@resilience4lyfe33129 күн бұрын
I miss him too… ❤RIP AB
@harryagrotis32613 күн бұрын
I've had it many times and halfway through I was drooling already.....
@mcmc1103Ай бұрын
I used to cook beef burgundy but my beef was floured to make the meat moist and gravy thick. This is like American and Caribbean beef stew, served over rice or mash potatoes.
@michaelkingsbury4305Ай бұрын
Posh beef and Guinness, wine substituted.
@fuckamericanidiotАй бұрын
@@michaelkingsbury4305 So you made something else
@mcmc1103Ай бұрын
@@michaelkingsbury4305 I will try beef with Guinness. Matter of fact, I will be having a Guinness tonite.
@DiamondPaintWithDiamondDave12 күн бұрын
Start cooking Monday to serve on Friday...but it looks amazing! Gonna have to come back to this and try it in the near future!
@mime454Ай бұрын
I have it marinating right now. Will finish tomorrow. Looks delicious.
@moe2377Ай бұрын
Same here!! Excited for tomorrow.
@christinegamblin8584Ай бұрын
This looks amazing. I will try making it. Thanks!!!
@TheOne-dc3wqАй бұрын
FYI, us continental Europeans tend NOT to use the celery sticks (or stalk of the celery plant), like you use them in the anglosphere, but instead we prefer to use the root part called celeriac which is much more flavoursome, less fibrous than the stalk, if the root is selected carefully, and blends in much better with other root vegetables in cooking.
@grovermartin687425 күн бұрын
Yes, celeriac has a much rounder, fuller flavor than celery. It is not the same plant, you know. Not common to find celeriac in US shops. It has a very long growing season, and is a bit pricey.
@summernaleDunningKruger25 күн бұрын
The root? My German family doesn't use the root at all! Infact, they use the leafy green parts at the top to add extra flavor(that isn't bitter like the root).
@summernaleDunningKruger25 күн бұрын
@@grovermartin6874thank you! I was going to say that using the bitterest part of celery seems like a rotten way to "add flavor." Dunning Kruger it the OP and confused the rest of us, thank you for straightening it out for me. I was also trying to figure out how a veggie kids eat slathered in peanut butter and raisins is "too fibrous." I appreciate you clarifying for me.
@grovermartin687425 күн бұрын
@@summernaleDunningKruger When the US folks transferred to [West] Germany couldn't find stalk celery, there was a great moaning, LOL! Apparently, they didn't enjoy the great restaurants in the area, where the customary salad with dinner was three shredded clumps in a lovely vinaigrette, one of beets, one of carrots, one of celeriac. Beautiful, too.
@willsdensda20 күн бұрын
Thanks for the tip!
@Justme774006 күн бұрын
Oh, does this look unbelievably delicious! I have a really nice Italian red that I will use for this when I make it soon.
@titusrider7948Ай бұрын
Dude, this looks awesome 😊
@ChefBillyParisiАй бұрын
Appreciate you taking the time to watch it. Thank you.
@TinMan-kd2gv25 күн бұрын
I don’t make this version of beef stew recipes but I made a lot of Goulash which it is very similar and tasted incredible. With Goulash, you put the potatoes into the pot the last 20-30 mins depending on the size. Serve with either baguette or rice 😋. My kids love it
@JBSmoke1Ай бұрын
Looks awesome!
@ChefBillyParisiАй бұрын
many thanks!
@markcummings6856Ай бұрын
Yum. Lots of work. Thanks.
@ChefBillyParisiАй бұрын
It definitely takes a minute, but well worth it!
@mauimarcusАй бұрын
And as you said... it's really a great dish for holidays, occasions, or just anytime. I don't think anyone would be disappointed in seeing this at the table.
@markcummings6856Ай бұрын
@@ChefBillyParisi Indeed.
@davidcox3076Ай бұрын
Cooked this years ago when my parents were visiting. I'm not a pro chef, but it was incredible. This recipe looks yummy.
@tymz-r-achanginАй бұрын
2:35 Update by Chef Billy Parisi. Important Note: Always turn your pot over in order to dump out the bug remains from when the pots were improperly stored whereby not being placed upside down
@모-q4z19 күн бұрын
This makes no sense
@mikerhonevich48119 күн бұрын
@@모-q4z Thats because youre obviously slow
@anthonyantoine9232Ай бұрын
I'm glad you mentioned the pot roast at the end, because you can honestly get like 95% of a good boeuf bourguignon with just a little extra work on a pot roast and for notably less effort. Works great for prepping ahead of time and eating throughout the week IMO.
@mcmdrpiffle447Ай бұрын
Speechless ! ! I cook. It's what I do. I just this evening found your site. For any other recipe, I'd have something to add... For YOUR Boeuf Bourguignon, I've nothing to add. Nothing. Perfection ! Know That. This is perfection.
@ChefBillyParisiАй бұрын
Many thanks!
@jordanb3787Ай бұрын
French here! I agree! Perfection!
@pdk213Ай бұрын
That really looked incredible. The whole journey. Thank you!
@shaunpreston2839Ай бұрын
I'm an Englishman but gotta admit this is one of the greatest dishes ever with fried bread I make also with venison! Winner all day long!😂😅
@jadams1722Ай бұрын
*As an Englishman you gotta admit everyone cooks better than you! Especially the French.* 🤷🏻♂️
@jackreacher5667Ай бұрын
@@jadams1722 As an English Chef, we cook far better than Americans, that's for sure.
@DenUitvreterАй бұрын
@@jadams1722 He was just being honest his opinion does not carry any authority.
@jadams172217 күн бұрын
@ That’s laughable! We both know that 😂🙄
@roderickcampbell210516 күн бұрын
Wonderful recipe and great ingredients. A fine red wine is a must, but I have never seen the brandy before. A amazing touch. Now I have to some brandy, but it's Christmas eve, so it will be New Years meal. Thanks and best wishes.
@warchild4069Ай бұрын
Excellent video!!!! Excellent execution!!!! This is great with properly prepared scalloped potatoes.
@faithsrvtrip8768Ай бұрын
I'm down south for my 5th winter in the RV. Local stores sell very affordable smoked pork jowl also called guanciale, yay! And beef cheeks are sold in the Mexican section. Yay! My next beef bourguignon will be made with beef cheeks and either Italian chianti or cabernet sauvignon but cooking time will easily be 3 to 4 hours. Mexicans use beef cheeks for barbacoa in Texas. Oh I love how are using leek leaf for bouquet garni bundle! So cute! I'm drooling over those pearl onions cooked in pork belly fat! I never liked frozen pearl onions they have an off taste so this may change my mind about them if you use fresh and properly prepare them by blanching and cooking in bacon (or guanciale) fat. Love the baby potatoes in butter. I hate peeling taters but it was very pretty :) Happy cooking y'all!
@BlinknoneАй бұрын
Guanciale.. The secret ingredient of authentic Carbonara.. OMG i love it.
@faithsrvtrip876822 күн бұрын
@@Blinknone Same here! And when it is labeled Smoked Pork Jowl AND it's 1/3rd the price I love that even more! My favorite flavoring, now. Like it almost more than bacon :)
@anthonybuono0280918 күн бұрын
Great show. I love the sharing of the hacks.
@KeePenneАй бұрын
As soon as my eyes watched you prepare this meal, my stomach had just one question: When?
@ChefBillyParisiАй бұрын
come on thru!
@jamespardue305522 күн бұрын
WOW. Not sure I could pull this off, but I LOVE Beef Burgundy. I see a kitchen adventure in my future.........
@a_leafАй бұрын
All cultures have a variation of this exact recipe ingredient combinations.
@DenUitvreterАй бұрын
The French themselves have more than one, probably Burgundy has.
@Lostdeltallc15 күн бұрын
Sweet Jesus. This will be my next culinary adventure. Thank you!!
@Jbp65826 күн бұрын
I’ve made this many times, I may try a few of the things you did next time. When I went to France I was nervous about trying it at a restaurant. What if I realized mine wasn’t as good as I thought? I had it at a restaurant in the Burgandy region and it was sublime. And I realized what I make at home was indeed delicious!
@cbarak72Ай бұрын
Red wine is the secret in making beef tender. Any type, it doesn't have to be expensive.
@ChefBillyParisiАй бұрын
100%
@2good2oftenАй бұрын
@@ChefBillyParisi a 12 dollar bottle of shiraz or merlot .. save the chateneuf for latter !
@L2.Lagrange6 күн бұрын
This does look really good. I'll have to give a similar recipe a try soon
@obelittle530Ай бұрын
Christmas dinner anyone?
@ChefBillyParisiАй бұрын
LG!!
@luisepage28 күн бұрын
Oh my god, this looks delicious. Trying this this weekend
@dillonwang142929 күн бұрын
My stomach is rumbling but my wallet is crying.
@rodolpheROGER22 күн бұрын
C'est Bien vrai cela! A new French aficionado!
@starfishsystemsАй бұрын
Some years ago I had the gpod fortune of connecting with a local supplier of Pinot Noir grapes. After crushing, I immediately pressed off about 1/4 of the juice, fermented the rest open, and after giving it a year in barrel ended up with 225 litres of very nice intense wine that aged well for about eight years. The acidity was good, but it never developed all the complexity that I was hoping for. It was still an incredible luxury to have at least a very good Pinot Noir in such quantity that I could pour it or cook with it in abundance and still keep a clear conscience. This video reminds me of those days, summers lived outdoors on the coast of British Columbia. Starting the marinade the night before, I would take a day to make Bouef Bourgignon in a three-legged pot over coals. Browning the meat is easily done, but it's tricky to keep the fire going yet not create too much heat for simmering. Honestly, that's why it takes most of the day, because half the time the pot is off the fire after more wood has been added. But fortunately the volume of liquid helps very much to moderate the pot temperature, and the result is certainly worth the wait. This video has now got me wondering if I might be able to get my hands on some Pinot Noir grapes next fall. Thanks for the inspiration!
@ctrlaltchrisАй бұрын
Okay
@chrisrrasberry28 күн бұрын
I just made this and it is awesome!
@udasaiАй бұрын
Every French recipe is the same: shallots, carrots, celery, mushrooms, butter. Fuss around with these; now fuss around with some meat. Add parsley, sage, rosemary, thyme, salt, pepper, bay leaf. Fuss some more. Cook, reserve all the juice, and put it back. Probably cook some flour and butter. Dump on platter, sprinkle parsley. Side of mashed potatoes. Et voila, vous cest la francais or whatever the hell the French babble for "Now you're Frenching" is.
@wokfriedburgerАй бұрын
This is actually exactly what i needed to hear, and its true af Thank you
@CrimeVidАй бұрын
Every American reciipe is the same, meat onions garlic corn, cornstarch cheese. add ridiculous quantities of seasonings with folksey names,the ingredients of which are mostly the same, add more cheese,and heavy whipping cream. add boiled scones . now you'e Yanking it serving suggestion , grated parmejan (?) and don't forget to serve your wine in jam jars.
@jimmason8502Ай бұрын
You clearly have never been to culinary school.
@pirogue6565Ай бұрын
@@jimmason8502you clearly have no sense of humor.
@REMY.C.Ай бұрын
We don't have that expression in France but it's funny 🤣
@davejalenderki29 күн бұрын
I am absolutely going to make this. The more difficult and involved a recipe is the better I like it. I try to make a different international dish once a month. The last French dish I made was ratatouille. I am looking forward to making this one. Thanks for sharing.
@TheReal_DanАй бұрын
I just found a new favorite channel! Can’t wait to make this 🙌🏻 thank you for sharing!
@juinhirtzmann6302Ай бұрын
Hey, ok, so I'm the French guy that's gonna tell you wrong but Côtes du Rhône isn't Bourgogne wine, it is Côtes du Rhônes. It comes from the Rhônes valley, which is outside of Bourgogne. And pinot noir isn't a geographic appellation, it is a grape kind, like Syrah.
@ChefBillyParisiАй бұрын
You’re correct, I responded to this a few times and some other comments :-). Thanks for sharing.
@grovermartin687425 күн бұрын
A beautiful recipe, well demonstrated and explained. Thank you! I must say, if I used that much salt, I'd have a stroke. Yegods and little fishes! The cattle are given salt, you can taste it in the meat. As a chef, you must become accustomed to ever-increasing amounts. Aside from all that salt, it is a wonderful dish.
@davecarr5892Ай бұрын
Good thing you didn’t use the Côtes du Rhône wine. The name of the dish would have to change.
@ChefBillyParisiАй бұрын
For it to be super classic, it must be a wine from the Burgundy region, but I'm not sure anyone would know if someone used a Côtes du Rhône.
@DenUitvreterАй бұрын
@@ChefBillyParisi There probably are, Burgundy wine has it's own cult following and is quite characteristic. I don't like to cook expensive wines, I just try to find a reasonably priced bold, dark red, high on tannines and alcohol one from anywhere. You lose the wine's subtlety mostly cooking it, but not it's "body".
@troupier88Ай бұрын
Burgundy is north of Lyon (beaujolais as the southern terroir) and côtes du Rhône comes from south of Lyon (Vienne / Condrieu to Marseille). But any redwine make the trick
@fergon60929 күн бұрын
😂😂😂
@michaelmcclure935021 күн бұрын
Best meal ever!
@endthisnonsense720229 күн бұрын
Boeuf Bourgignon is a stew. A good stew. The French dish we're obsessed with is Canard à la Presse.
@maning31329 күн бұрын
Billy, I Love how you cook and teach. I just SUBSCRIBED. Merci!
@riverrock335Ай бұрын
Be nice people. When did our society change to normalize Karen behavior.
@Butterflies-are-free7 күн бұрын
When Trump came into office. That’s when.
@chefdujourАй бұрын
My compliments to the filming, editing, planning and execution of a video of a wonderful slightly modified classic but for very good reasons and with great explanations and great technique. Well done, magnificent and Bon Apetit to all who come close to this level of success. Well done Chef! 🔪🍷🔥
@ChefBillyParisiАй бұрын
I appreciate the kind encouraging words. Many thanks and Thanks for watching!
@chefdujourАй бұрын
@@ChefBillyParisi Many critics can neither produce such a video or cook such a meal. Ignore the critics, there are very few who even know where to begin with a pot au feu.
@philcremer4709Ай бұрын
1:53 Did you mean, using those black gloves? I don't know why they're a thing in cooking circles. That's the kind of stuff you see in horror movies. Concealing the evidence? Just plain creepy!!!
@adopequeenatyrantkingaboss8057Ай бұрын
It looks so good. One day I will muster up the courage to try it!
@collywobbles116321 күн бұрын
UK here. We knew of this long before Julia Child. What you mean is that Americans had never heard of French cooking until the 1960's. America isn't worldwide. It was also famous in the French colonies. Both of which France and 🇬🇧 had long before America was even invented.
@magpie174418 күн бұрын
I think that is true. In the US Julia Childs made French cooking fashionable in her TV show. My mom loved watching her. ❤
@Greenplanet949Ай бұрын
Gorgeous! I just decided what I’m making for my next dinner party. I’ve made this before, but you make it so understandable.
@ChefBillyParisiАй бұрын
Hope you enjoy
@TrevorAnthonyBand28 күн бұрын
me too! We just invited the friends over for the 28th and they're in for a treat and they don't even suspect how awesome is the meal I'm going to feed them! hahahaha
@fastmphАй бұрын
Great video, clean narration, to the point, can’t wait to watch more of your videos.
@JohnMarch-m4o23 күн бұрын
Excellent method, use this myself.
@rfc313310 күн бұрын
I suggest, very gently Browning the flour in butter until golden brown before adding as a thickening agent. This better prevents it from clumping than just cold mixing the butter & flour
@4seasons5468 күн бұрын
Bravo 🍾 well done 👍 ❤
@ms.rickie26 күн бұрын
Best video ever! Thank you so much. I know it’s gonna be expensive, but I’m still gonna try and make it. Your instructions were right on. Thanks for keeping it simple, Time consuming but simple and it looks delicious! I just subscribed. Wishing you the best. PsI am watching you from Cincinnati, Ohio USA
@jmbig20 күн бұрын
Un bon vieux boeuf bourguignon !! Ça tient au corps !! 😁😁😋😋😋😋👍👍