Instant Pot Beef Bourguignon Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Instant Pot

by: Carlos C. Olaechea

September20,2019

4

16 Ratings

  • Prep time 10 minutes
  • Cook time 55 minutes
  • Serves 4

Jump to Recipe

Author Notes

My husband bought me an Instant Pot on Amazon Day three years ago, after I had dropped hints that I may need to get an electric pressure cooker at some point. The type of food I prefer to cook and eat at home consists largely of stews, after all. There is for me something so satisfying about putting a whole bunch of things into a single pot, letting it simmer for the better part of an afternoon, and then returning to the stove to find something magical.

The only problem with this method of cooking is that it requires a lot of time. If I try to rush a Creole Peruvian stew, for instance, the flavors just won’t develop and dinnertime will be disappointing. These slow-cooked dishes really aren’t made for households in which everyone works outside the home. It seems as if the only way you can consistently put out bowls of fork-tender oxtails or fall-off-the-bone short ribs every day and maintain an active personal life is to be a witch or a wizard with magical powers.

Otherwise, you may find yourself in my situation: You set dates on weekends or holidays for making your favorite stews. You text your partner: “Honey, I’m not leaving the house this Saturday. We’re having goat stew for dinner.” Or you don’t bother making these dishes at home and just enjoy them at restaurants.

Or you get a pressure cooker.

My husband, John, always thinks about my safety and, in particular, my propensity for getting into kitchen accidents (you can read about my mandoline saga here). In his mind, old-school stovetop pressure cookers were just a catastrophe waiting to happen in my clumsy hands. John also has a passion for technology; meanwhile, I’m still learning to live with a food processor (I still hand-grate bread for bread crumbs).

The Instant Pot seemed to offer the solution: It was a pressure cooker, it was safe, and it was the latest in convenience-appliance technology.

While you’ve probably come across countless recipes that detail the innovative things you can do with an Instant Pot, I find that this 21st-century kitchen essential (let’s be truthful here) is your best tool for cooking old-school classics like the ones Abuela made. In my kitchen, this means that I am able to make Peruvian dishes that ordinarily take forever, like beef trotters in peanut sauce or braised tripe in turmeric and mint sauce—on a weeknight, no less. Pre-Instant Pot, I would have had to make plans well in advance for this kind of involved slow cooking.

And that brings me to the best part about having an Instant Pot: I can indulge in more impulse cooking. If my local Latin grocery has a sale on turkey necks, for instance, I can grab them and cook them that very day knowing it will take me less than an hour with a pressure cooker versus four times as long on the stove. And because the best meat for stews is typically the most inexpensive (with a few exceptions), I end up saving on groceries too.

One day, my local Latin grocery had a sale on veal stew meat. The styrofoam package contained gristle, bony chunks of pale pink meat with a lot of fat (stuff that would have ordinarily been thrown out in most mainstream grocery stores). I put the package of veal in my basket and grabbed some carrots, mushrooms, and a bottle of red wine. When I got home, I threw everything into my Instant Pot with some herbs, red wine, and a spoonful of tomato paste, and set it for 45 minutes. By the time John got home, we had a soul-warming pot of veal bourguignon waiting for us, Carlos-style.

I later found that the same approach works beautifully with other tough cuts of meat, including stew beef. This is my own rendition of beef bourguignon, a traditional French stew in red wine sauce. Everything goes into a pressure cooker and takes only 45 minutes to cook (versus several hours the traditional oven or stovetop way). You can use any type of meat you wish in this recipe. Just make sure that it’s not too lean and that it contains a lot of connective tissue and even some bones, if you can. This will give your stew more body due to the release of collagen as well a deeper, richer flavor. —Carlos C. Olaechea

  • Test Kitchen-Approved

What You'll Need

Ingredients
  • 1 poundstew beef, cut into 1-inch pieces
  • 2 tablespoonsall-purpose flour
  • Salt and pepper, to taste
  • 1 tablespoonolive oil
  • 1 tablespoonunsalted butter
  • 1 large bay leaf, fresh or dried
  • 2 large garlic cloves, smashed
  • 1/2 teaspoondried thyme
  • 2 yellow onions, cut into half-inch slices
  • 2 medium carrots, peeled and cut into 1-inch pieces
  • 1 tablespoontomato paste
  • 8 ouncesbutton mushrooms, cleaned
  • Red wine, enough to cover meat (see directions)
Directions
  1. Pat the beef dry and set aside. In a bowl, add the flour, salt, and pepper and stir to combine. Add the meat and toss to coat (it's okay if it's a little sticky).
  2. Turn the Instant Pot onto the medium Sauté setting and add 1 tablespoon olive oil. When the oil is hot, add a single layer of meat. Wait for it to brown on one side, and then turn over. When browned on both sides, remove and place on a plate. Repeat with the remaining meat until it is all browned. Set browned meat aside.
  3. Add butter to the Instant Pot. When it is melted and foaming, add bay leaf and fry until fragrant. Add the onions and stir until translucent. Stir in garlic and carrots and fry for about 3 minutes. When garlic is no longer raw, add tomato paste and mix with the vegetables. Fry for 1 minute. You can add a little bit of wine if things start to brown too quickly. Stir in the mushrooms and cook for about 2 minutes.
  4. Add thyme, meat and enough wine to just cover all the solids. Turn the Instant Pot off. Place the cover on the Instant Pot, making sure to turn the knob to the Pressure Cook setting. Cook on high pressure for 45 minutes.
  5. When finished cooking, release the pressure and uncover pot. Turn on the sauté setting to high and reduce until you reach the desired consistency (and to cook off any alcohol). Season with salt and pepper to taste and serve with a baguette, egg noodles, or roasted potatoes.

Tags:

  • Stew
  • French
  • Beef
  • Instant Pot
  • Weeknight Cooking
  • Weekend Cooking
  • Entree
  • Dinner

See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • Jaxmccaff

  • IWearTheHat

  • Robert Lafferty

  • Mon-Cherie Castillo

  • Lorraine Purcell

I was born in Peru to a Limeño father and a Texan mother. We moved to Miami when I was five, and I grew up in the "Kendall-suyo" neighborhood—often called the 5th province of the Inca Empire because of its large Peruvian population. I've been writing about food since I was 11 years old, and in 2016 I received a master's degree in Gastronomy from Boston University. A travel columnist at Food52, I'm currently based in Hollywood, Florida—another vibrant Peruvian community—where I am a writer, culinary tour guide, and consultant.

Popular on Food52

27 Reviews

rojoyo July 15, 2023

I had my doubts, but was pleasantly surprised. I never sauté anything in an instant pot. It’s like using camping pots. I use a proper pan on the stove and then transfer to the instant pot. Like everyone says, it does have more liquid than desired, but reduces quickly with the lid off. Added a little kitchen bouquet to match the darkness in the picture.

Tish F. October 28, 2022

This recipe is excellent. Took about an hour and 15 minutes with prep. Cooked as is but used fresh thyme instead. I had some good red wine on hand so I think anything $15 or over is good. Used a Spanish red. Did cook down 10 minutes like another reviewer suggested and let sit for 10 to thicken. Served over egg noodles. So so good!

M September 5, 2022

Fabulous. Everything you said was true about this.

Jaxmccaff March 27, 2021

Made this exactly as directed. I did use a high quality bottle of wine and served with roasted potatoes. It turned out very well with excellent flavor. I will make this again.

Willow450 January 27, 2021

It turned out way too soupy. I tried to thicken it up and the carrots turned to mush. Not my best effort. Probably my fault as I probably added too much liquid, but won’t try again

Smaug January 1, 2023

I'm new to the insta pot and have been reading a lot of recipes- strikes me that pretty much everything includes an awful lot of liquid, and very little of it will cook off. I had a similar experience with a slow cooker, which I gave up on after a while; I'm not that big on soup. For a stew, it also seems like it's not going to be practical to sequence your ingredients. I have my doubts about the alcohol really cooking off in this recipe.

IWearTheHat November 26, 2020

I cooked this last night. Overall it was very good (we used dark bread and butter with the meal) but the wine flavor was so strong it left a slightly tangy taste for me. I think next time I will use 2/3 or 3/4 wine and and 1/3 or 1/4 beef broth to cover everything. I also used three instead of two carrots and it worked fine. I was impressed with the multi-cooker method (I have a fa*gor LUX multi-cooker) and will try this with potatoes or egg noodles next time.

Marguerite October 20, 2020

The promo on Facebook said that this recipe and method would yield a Boeuf Bourguignon with a “deeper and richer flavor.” And it doesn’t, not at all. It’s just a faster method.
I’ve been making Boeuf Bourguignon for years. I’ve tried several variations over the years, all excellent. But there is nothing new or better about this recipe. It is just easier - NOT better tasting. Pressure cookers have been around for more than 80 years. The Instant Pot is simply an electric, programmable one. That false ad bragging about deeper and richer flavor was just stupid click bait.

Robert L. May 19, 2020

made this on May 19 with instant pot i borrowed from my daughter. No tomato paste so I roasted some cherry tomatoes an mushed them. No button mushrooms so I reconstituted dried Porcini, added the broth & chopped them up. Sauteed meat, & stuff, dash Worcestershire for some reason. OMG, all I can say. For a first exposure to pressure cook, very impressed, as opposed to a five hour braise. BTW, used Baldor Beef during this pandemic. Excellent. Thanks to the author for a no forget formula. Oh yes, egg noodles on side. Life's good, feelin lucky tonight.

Sheila M. March 4, 2020

Great meal. I made this last night in my 8 quart instant pot. I multiplied the ingredients by 1.5 since I had extra beef. We thoroughly enjoy
It. Great flavor and wonderful left over. I served it over wide flat noodles and a baguette on the side. I used Malbec wine and really enjoyed it. I used my large cast iron skillet to brown the beef since it was more efficient than the instant pot sauté in batches. Great hearty meal.

Beth M. February 17, 2020

I made this recipe double. I used herbes de Provence instead of just thyme. My family loved it and I did too. I did boil the stew after releasing the pressure for at least 10 minutes to reduce the sauce. It was excellent and complex. We ate it with potatoes the first night but I'm sure my husband will love the leftovers with noodles tomorrow night when I'm out. I think it's an excellent recipe and will definitely make it again.

Mon-Cherie C. November 8, 2019

5 Stars! It was a perfect 1st recipe I made in my new instant Pot, it was very easy and it was amazing, even the next morning with a sunny side egg on it. I will definitely be making this again.

Carlos C. November 12, 2019

Thanks so much for the glowing review. I am so glad you liked it.

Kathy C. October 24, 2019

After done cooking, throw the egg noodles in, stir a bit, cover and pressure cook another 5 minutes! Amazing! Noodles are just the right consistency and soak up some of the extra juice. I love my Insta Pot too!!

Lorraine P. September 29, 2019

Family loved the recipe - just as written. No changes or substitutions. Served over wide noodles. Won over my husband (who had a mother who made traditionally every month during his childhood). I used a lighter cabernet sauvignon (Dark Myth from Paso Robles 2018). I tasted before using - almost more like a Merlot. Thank you for the recipe.

Eric K. September 30, 2019

I'm so glad, Lorraine.

Carlos C. October 1, 2019

I'm so glad you enjoyed it, Lorraine. Great tip on the wine

Jennifer K. September 26, 2019

(1) The type of wine makes a big difference. It said "red wine," and I used red wine, and it was...meh. The wine was overwhelming. But when I've made boeuf bourguignon with a burgundy, it is much better.

pjcamp September 27, 2019

Burgundy is a Pinot Noir so you can substitute if you can't find actual Burgundy or don't want to spring for the cost.

Eric K. September 30, 2019

Thanks for the tip!

memarq0 September 23, 2019

If you let the liquid cook down after releasing the pressure, it's lovely - you just need to commit to that additional time. While this instant pot recipe is good and flavorful, it's not "instant".

Carlos C. September 27, 2019

They never are instant, but it still takes a lot less time than doing it the traditional way.

pjcamp September 21, 2019

Oh my god, this is awful! And in retrospect, I know exactly why. A pressure cooker is airtight. There's no place for the alcohol to go so it stays right there in the pot. So it ends up a bunch of unmelded flavors swimming in a boozy jus. The taste is quite harsh and really not good at all. I did, by the way, follow the recipe exactly.

Carlos C. September 22, 2019

Oh dear! I'm sorry it didn't turn out well for you. I know what you mean about pressure cookers being airtight, which is why I instructed to turn on the sauté function to reduce the sauce. BTW, I try to avoid following a recipe exactly. Always trust your instinct. There are so many famous authors and chefs who may instruct you to cook something in a way that is not to your liking or just plain wrong. I'll never forget the recipe for rice pilaf from Ottolenghi's Jerusalem cookbook. I cackled reading his instructions for cooking rice, because I knew it would turn out like mush, so I made it the way I knew to make it but added the ingredients he recommended. Several months later, I tried someone else's rendition that followed the recipe to the letter, and it was terrible. Always trust your intuition, regardless of who wrote or published the recipe. Recipes are not commandments.

pjcamp September 23, 2019

Thank you for a very nice reply. I may try it again and see what happens.

Carlos C. September 27, 2019

perhaps cook off the alcohol first and then set the pressure cooker

Smaug January 2, 2023

As my first composed dish in my new insta pot I tried a beef stew. I browned the meat (in a skillet) and reduced the wine considerably in that pan before putting it in the pot. I used pretty much my usual "recipe", which uses red wine for maybe 1/3 of the liquid, and can report that the wine flavor was much stronger than usual in the finished dish; I attribute this to the insta pot, not the reduction. It was really good, by the way.

Instant Pot Beef Bourguignon Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

Why is beef stew tough Instant Pot? ›

The Secret to Super Tender Beef

But skip the pre-cut stew beef. Oftentimes, stew beef is cut into irregularly shaped pieces and can have a lot of tough gristle that will never get tender. Picking up a piece of boneless beef chuck instead means that you can easily trim off all the unwanted parts first.

Can you overcook beef bourguignon? ›

Can you overcook beef bourguignon? Although this is a sturdy dish that can withstand hours of cooking, depending on the cut and size of the meat pieces, it is possible to overcook it as all the melting fat renders out of the meat, leaving it quite dry to bite into.

What's the difference between pot roast and beef bourguignon? ›

Instead of keeping the roast whole, like my mom's pot roast, this dish cuts the meat into large pieces, just like the classic. Each piece is browned individually, not to lock in moisture, but to add flavor. As the pieces slowly cook in the liquid, they become meltingly tender.

Does the alcohol cook out of beef bourguignon? ›

It is true that some of the alcohol evaporates, or burns off, during the cooking process.

Is it better to slow cook or pressure cook stew? ›

Taste: For overall taste, the pressure cooker was the hands-down winner. Beef, carrots, and potatoes all retained their rich flavors.

Can you overcook stew in a pressure cooker? ›

Unfortunately, once you overcook a piece of meat in the pressure cooker, there's no going back. You'll be left with a pile of dry, crunchy, tasteless fibers and no amount of additional pressure cooking is going to put that moisture back into the meat.

What cut of meat is best for beef bourguignon? ›

Boeuf Bourguignon consists of beef (usually a tough, inexpensive cut like chuck), red wine, beef stock, carrots, aromatics like garlic and onion, pearl onions, mushrooms, and bacon.

What's the difference between beef stew and beef bourguignon? ›

Both beef bourguignon and beef stew are delicious! It's all in preparation. Stew is a cooking method, and beef bourguignon is a classic French dish that uses beef stewed in wine to create its characteristic flavor. The difference between stew and beef bourguignon is not just one of taste but also one of the methods.

Which red wine is best for beef bourguignon? ›

Red Burgundy is the traditional match for Beef Bourguignon, Merlot dominated blends from both Australia and Bordeaux. Red Bordeaux in particular, can be enjoyed more fully. A weighty Pinot Noir or a robust Ribera del Duero. Tempranillo wine is also fine.

Is beef bourguignon better the next day? ›

As with all beef stews, this one is best made a day or two ahead; don't sauté the mushrooms and onions until just before serving.

Can you taste the red wine in beef bourguignon? ›

The finished stew is filled with tender chunks of meat and mushroom, along with plump onions and carrots and a deeply rich red-wine base. It's what Burgundy might taste like...if Burgundy had a land made of mushroom, pork, and onion, and rivers flowing with vin rouge.

Should beef bourguignon be thick or thin? ›

Stews like boeuf bourguignon should ideally be thick and glossy enough that the liquid coats the back of a spoon, a process aided by collagen-rich cuts of meat and a long, slow simmer.

What can I substitute for red wine in beef bourguignon? ›

If you're seeking a substitute for red wine, consider replacing one-for-one with:
  • Alcohol-free red wine.
  • Beef broth.
  • Chicken broth.
  • Red wine vinegar (use ½ vinegar and ½ water for similar flavor results)
  • Cranberry juice*
  • Pomegranate juice*
Aug 8, 2023

Why does my beef bourguignon taste bitter? ›

Don't over cook your Beef bourguignon. It will turn bitter because you cooked the red wine too long. If you find your beef bourguignon to be bitter, try adding a little butter and sugar, but it may or may not work.

Can I drive after eating beef bourguignon? ›

The answer is probably not, unless you're trying really, really hard! All the experts we consulted on this subject agreed that it would be very difficult to eat enough boozy food to push your blood alcohol content (BAC) over the drink-drive limit.

Why is my stew meat tough pressure cooker? ›

What to Do If the Meat Isn't Tender Enough? The meat in Pressure Cooker Beef Stew should be cooked tender by the time the first 10-minute cook time ends. If you like a fork-tender beef, you may want to add a few extra minutes to the cook time. I recommend tasting the beef to ensure it's cooked as tender as you like it.

How do you fix tough beef stew? ›

The most important key to making stew meat tender is being sure to cook it for a long time. If you want super tender beef, you'll need to cook it on a low heat in a Dutch oven on the stove or a slow cooker for at least a few hours.

Why is the beef in my stew tough? ›

You overcook your beef stew meat

There's something romantic about letting a stew simmer away on the stove top all day, but if you actually let it cook all day long, chances are you'll wind up with tough, dry, stringy meat.

How do you make beef stew meat not tough? ›

The best cooking method for tenderizing stew meat is slow cooking. This can be achieved by simmering the stew on low heat for a long period, either on the stovetop, in a slow cooker, or in the oven.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Laurine Ryan

Last Updated:

Views: 5293

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (57 voted)

Reviews: 80% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Laurine Ryan

Birthday: 1994-12-23

Address: Suite 751 871 Lissette Throughway, West Kittie, NH 41603

Phone: +2366831109631

Job: Sales Producer

Hobby: Creative writing, Motor sports, Do it yourself, Skateboarding, Coffee roasting, Calligraphy, Stand-up comedy

Introduction: My name is Laurine Ryan, I am a adorable, fair, graceful, spotless, gorgeous, homely, cooperative person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.