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Fillet steak with blackened edge sliced on a wooden board with edible flowers and a bottle of worcestershire sauce
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Black & blushing Worcestershire fillet

With fragrant fresh rosemary

Fillet steak with blackened edge sliced on a wooden board with edible flowers and a bottle of worcestershire sauce
Save recipe

30 mins plus marinating overnight
Not Too Tricky

serves 4

About the recipe

This is the most delicious barbecued beef I think I’ve ever had (even if I say so myself). Trust me because it’s going to go really dark and look burnt, but it’ll be perfect inside if you do it right.


nutrition per serving

Calories

g

Fat

g

Saturates

g

Sugars

g

Salt

g

Protein

g

Carbs

g

Fibre

of an adult’s reference intake


Recipe From

Jamie Magazine

Jamie Magazine

By Jamie Oliver

Ingredients

600-700g piece of fillet steak

2 heaped teaspoons French mustard

8-10 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce, plus extra for drizzling

a good drizzle of extra virgin olive oil, plus extra to serve

2 sprigs of fresh rosemary

TO COOK

unsalted butter

olive oil

optional: thyme and rosemary flowers

Method

  1. The day before, or at least a few hours before cooking, put all the ingredients in a large sandwich bag (pick and finely chop the rosemary first).
  2. Squeeze out the air then spend a few minutes massaging all the flavours into the meat. Put in the fridge for a few hours or overnight.
  3. About 1½ hours before you’re ready to cook, remove the beef from the fridge and place in a cool corner of the kitchen to come up slowly to room temperature.
  4. Preheat your barbecue. Put a few knobs of chilled butter into a bowl of cold water and take those outside with you when you’re ready to cook.
  5. This next bit is going to be down to you and your intuition. What works for me every time is taking the fillet out of the bag, quickly patting it with kitchen paper then rolling it in olive oil and putting it on the hottest part of the barbecue to give it colour. Rub it with a chilled knob of butter as you cook it for about 8 to 10 minutes, turning every minute.
  6. Once it looks good, move the fillet to a cooler part of the barbecue to finish cooking to your liking. Another 4 to 5 minutes, turning every minute, should give you medium-done meat. If you like it medium rare, cook it for less, or more for well done. It’s better to err on the side of under-done. That way, the worst-case scenario is that you take the fillet off, slice into it and find that it’s under-cooked, then have to put it back.
  7. When you’re happy, put it on a platter, rub it again with butter so it really shines, then drizzle over more Worcestershire sauce, extra virgin olive oil, and thyme and rosemary flowers, if you have them.
  8. Let the meat rest for a few minutes, before slicing at the table. Season from a height then quickly rub the slices in the juices before you let everyone grab some.

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