on 20-01-2014 11:45 PM
Do you use a crepe inside the Puff Paste to prevent the beef from drying out?
20-01-2014 11:47 PM - edited 20-01-2014 11:47 PM
Yum, that was my favourite meal out in the late 1980's. Beef, mushrooms, pate, pastry?
I have never had one with a crepe inside the pastry...sounds ick.
on 20-01-2014 11:49 PM
LOL, they're savoury crepes. Not the ones you have with ice cream.
on 20-01-2014 11:53 PM
Beef Wellington was this first!
on 20-01-2014 11:55 PM
Do you use a crepe inside the Puff Paste to prevent the beef from drying out?
What is Puff Paste?
on 20-01-2014 11:55 PM
first what?
and see how grey and overcooked the edges of the steak are?
If you use a crepe, it prevents that.
on 20-01-2014 11:56 PM
@am*3 wrote:Do you use a crepe inside the Puff Paste to prevent the beef from drying out?
What is Puff Paste?
the stuff around the outside that goes golden brown if you egg wash it and don't burn it during cooking.
on 20-01-2014 11:59 PM
the stuff around the outside that goes golden brown if you egg wash it and don't burn it during cooking.
stuff?
What (shell) do you put a crepe inside?
on 21-01-2014 12:01 AM
what do you mean?
you wrap the beef/steak in the crepe
on 21-01-2014 12:04 AM
@crikey*mate wrote:first what?
and see how grey and overcooked the edges of the steak are?
If you use a crepe, it prevents that.
Beef Wellington is a preparation of filet steak coated with pâté (often pâté de foie gras) and duxelles, which is then wrapped in puff pastry and baked.
A crepe would be yuk? With a piece of steak in it?