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Here it is — the full, upgraded version
Cold evening. One pot. Your whole kitchen smelling like a five-star kitchen.
That’s beef stew. And once you make it right — really right — you’ll wonder why you ever ordered it anywhere else.
Most people get this dish wrong in the same three ways (more on that below 👇). Fix those, and you’ve got a bowl of stew so rich and tender that people will legit ask you for the recipe.
Let’s get into it.
What You’ll Need
The Beef
| Ingredient | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Beef stew meat (chuck roast) | 2 lbs / 900g | Cut into 1.5-inch cubes |
| Olive oil | 3 tbsp | For searing |
| All-purpose flour | 3 tbsp | Coats the beef, thickens the stew |
| Salt | 1 tsp | Plus more to taste |
| Black pepper | 1/2 tsp | Freshly cracked if you have it |
The Broth & Flavor Base
| Ingredient | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Yellow onion | 1 large | Diced |
| Garlic cloves | 4 | Minced |
| Tomato paste | 2 tbsp | Don’t skip this |
| Dry red wine | 1 cup | Cabernet or Merlot work great |
| Beef broth | 3 cups | Low sodium preferred |
| Worcestershire sauce | 1 tbsp | Adds depth |
| Fresh thyme | 1 tsp leaves | Or 1/2 tsp dried |
| Bay leaves | 2 | Remove before serving |
The Vegetables
| Ingredient | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Yukon Gold potatoes | 4 medium | Cut into chunks |
| Carrots | 3 large | Peeled, sliced into rounds |
| Celery stalks | 2 | Sliced |
| Frozen peas | 1 cup | Stirred in at the very end |
| Fresh parsley | A small handful | Chopped, for garnish |
Tools You’ll Need

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- 🥘 Large Dutch oven (5 qt or bigger)
- 🔪 Sharp chef’s knife
- 🪵 Wooden cutting board
- 🥄 Wooden spoon or silicone spatula
- 🧮 Measuring cups and spoons
- 🥣 Ladle for serving
Pro Tips
“The secret to great beef stew isn’t the recipe. It’s the patience.”
Here are the five things that separate a good stew from one people are still talking about a week later.
1. Pat your beef DRY before searing Wet meat = steam. Dry meat = that gorgeous brown crust. Use paper towels. Takes 30 seconds. Makes a massive difference.
2. Sear in batches — never crowd the pan Throw too much beef in at once and the temperature drops. You’ll end up steaming instead of searing, and you’ll lose that deep, caramelized flavor before the stew even starts.
3. The tomato paste needs to cook Most people stir it in and move on. Let it sit in the hot pot for 2 full minutes until it darkens slightly. That’s where the richness comes from.
4. Add your potatoes LATE If they go in at the beginning, they turn to mush. Add them in the last 35-40 minutes only. Trust the timing.
5. Taste at the end, not during The broth reduces and concentrates as it cooks. What tastes underseasoned at the start might be perfect by the end — or might need just a pinch more salt. Always taste before you serve.
Substitutions & Variations
Not everyone has red wine in their pantry on a Tuesday night. No judgment.
| Swap This | For This |
|---|---|
| Red wine | Extra beef broth + 1 tbsp balsamic vinegar |
| Chuck roast | Beef short ribs or brisket |
| Yukon Gold potatoes | Sweet potatoes, turnips, or parsnips |
| Fresh thyme | Dried Italian seasoning or rosemary |
| Frozen peas | Mushrooms, corn, or green beans |
| All-purpose flour | 1 tbsp cornstarch mixed with 2 tbsp cold water |
Diet-Friendly Swaps
| Diet | What to Change |
|---|---|
| Gluten-free | Use cornstarch instead of flour |
| Low-carb | Skip potatoes, double the carrots + mushrooms |
| Dairy-free | Already dairy-free as written ✅ |
| Alcohol-free | Replace wine with broth + balsamic |
Make Ahead Tips
Here’s a fun fact most people don’t realize: beef stew tastes noticeably better the next day.
The flavors deepen, the broth thickens slightly, and the beef gets even more tender as it sits. So making it ahead isn’t just convenient — it’s actually the move.
- Night before: Cook the full stew, let it cool, refrigerate. Reheat low and slow on the stove.
- Vegetable prep: Dice everything the night before and store in the fridge. Cuts your active cook time in half.
- Freezer: Freeze in portions up to 3 months. Skip the potatoes if freezing — they get grainy after thawing. Just add freshly cooked ones when you reheat.
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How to Make It

Step 1: Prep the Beef
Pat beef cubes completely dry with paper towels.
Season with salt and pepper, then toss in flour until each piece is lightly coated.
Step 2: Sear in Batches
Heat 2 tablespoons of olive oil in your Dutch oven over medium-high heat until shimmering.
Add beef in a single layer. Do not touch it. Let it sear 3-4 minutes per side until deeply browned. Work in 2-3 batches.
Set seared beef aside on a plate.
Step 3: Build the Flavor Base
Lower the heat to medium. Add remaining 1 tablespoon of oil.
Cook diced onion for 4-5 minutes until soft and translucent. Add garlic, cook 60 seconds.
Add tomato paste and stir continuously for 2 full minutes until it darkens. This step = rich, complex flavor.
Step 4: Deglaze
Pour in the red wine. Use your wooden spoon to scrape every browned bit off the bottom of the pot.
Let it simmer 2-3 minutes until slightly reduced. Those bits are pure concentrated flavor — don’t leave a single one behind.
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Step 5: Add the Broth & Beef
Add beef broth, Worcestershire sauce, thyme, bay leaves, and the seared beef.
Stir. Bring to a boil.
Step 6: Simmer Low and Slow ⏱️
Reduce heat to low. Cover with the lid slightly ajar.
Simmer for 1 hour. Resist the urge to crank the heat.
Step 7: Add the Vegetables
After 1 hour, add potatoes, carrots, and celery.
Cover and simmer another 35-40 minutes until vegetables are fork-tender and beef pulls apart easily.
Step 8: Finish & Serve
Remove bay leaves. Taste and adjust salt/pepper.
Stir in frozen peas. Let warm 2-3 minutes.
Ladle into bowls. Top with fresh chopped parsley. Eat immediately — or even better, eat tomorrow.
At-a-Glance Cook Timeline
| Stage | Time |
|---|---|
| Prep (chopping, patting dry) | 15 min |
| Searing beef | 15 min |
| Building flavor base | 10 min |
| First simmer (beef only) | 60 min |
| Second simmer (with veg) | 35-40 min |
| Total | ~2 hrs 15 min |
Nutritional Breakdown
(Approximate, per serving — serves 6)
| Nutrient | Per Serving |
|---|---|
| Calories | ~420 kcal |
| Protein | 35g |
| Carbohydrates | 28g |
| Fat | 16g |
| Fiber | 4g |
| Sodium | ~580mg |
High protein. Real ingredients. No processed anything.
Great for meal prep, cold weather, or when you just need a bowl of something that actually fills you up.
Meal Pairing Suggestions
| Pairs Great With | Why |
|---|---|
| Crusty sourdough bread | For soaking up every drop of broth |
| Simple green salad | Adds freshness to balance the richness |
| Buttered egg noodles | Turn it into a heartier meal |
| Glass of the same red wine | Because you bought a bottle anyway |
Leftovers & Storage
| Storage Method | How Long | Tips |
|---|---|---|
| Refrigerator | Up to 4 days | Flavor improves daily |
| Freezer | Up to 3 months | Omit potatoes before freezing |
| Reheating | Low & slow on stovetop | Add a splash of broth if too thick |
Avoid microwaving on high — it makes the beef tough and ruins the texture of everything you worked so hard to build.
FAQ
What’s the absolute best cut of beef for stew? Chuck roast. Full stop. It has the fat and connective tissue that breaks down into silky, tender meat over a long cook. Lean cuts like sirloin will dry out and get chewy.
My stew came out too thin. What happened? A few possible reasons: you didn’t simmer long enough, or you added too much liquid. Fix it easily: mix 1 tablespoon cornstarch with 2 tablespoons cold water, stir into the simmering stew, and cook 5 more minutes.
Can I make this in a slow cooker? Yes. Sear the beef first (non-negotiable), then add everything to the slow cooker except potatoes and peas. Cook on LOW 7-8 hours or HIGH 4-5 hours. Add potatoes in the last 2 hours, peas at the very end.
Can I make this without wine? Absolutely. Use extra beef broth plus 1 tablespoon of balsamic vinegar. You still get that deep, layered flavor without the alcohol.
Why does my beef always come out chewy? It didn’t cook long enough, or the heat was too high. This dish needs a gentle, low simmer. High heat tightens the muscle fibers instead of breaking them down. Patience is the whole point.
Can I add mushrooms? Yes, and highly recommended. Add cremini or button mushrooms with the other vegetables in Step 7.
Wrapping Up
Beef stew is one of those recipes that rewards you for doing the small things right — the sear, the patience, the late addition of potatoes.
Get those right, and this becomes a permanent part of your cold-weather rotation. The kind of meal you make on a Sunday and find yourself thinking about on Wednesday.
Make it this week. Then come back and drop a comment — tell me how it turned out, what you swapped, or if someone in your house had seconds (they will). I love seeing these recipes come alive in real kitchens, so don’t be shy. 🙌
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