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Recipe for Tournedos Rossini anyone please

(34 Posts)
kittylester Wed 05-Aug-20 13:03:22

DH is 75 on Friday and has expressed a wish to have Tournedos Rossini for dinner.

Because I spoil him, I have been looking a recipes and noe seem to be as I remember it.

Has anyone got a good recipe - please.

kittylester Sun 09-Aug-20 08:35:30

Well, dh loved his Tournedos Rossini and hopes to have it again. I remembered why I usually had a plain steak - the pate was just a step too far for me.

I used minimoon's recipe (with bought stock - life is definitely too short to make stock!) and the sauce was delicious.

So thank you.

Nortsat Sat 08-Aug-20 17:24:38

Desert trollies - when we were young and were eating out, my mother always asked for ‘a bit of each’ dish.???

paddyanne Sat 08-Aug-20 11:08:44

Kittylester I use a recipe for Stroganoff from an old book written by monks.It uses stewing beef and takes a while unlike the fillet based one.The flavour is fab though and much preferred by family

paddyanne Sat 08-Aug-20 11:06:35

I miss decent cheese boards ,most places now just give a selection of cheese on your plate ,often the ones I dont like with fruit through it or ones that have been what my husband calls tampered with .I much preferred a large board rolled over to the table and being able to choose which cheese (s) I wanted from that ...and at the right temperature.Cant understand why some serve cheese straight out of a chiller

kittylester Sat 08-Aug-20 10:58:25

geekesse

The tournedos cut is the thinner end of the fillet.

I buy the thin end of the fillet and use it in stir fries or for strogannof!

Chewbacca Wed 05-Aug-20 20:45:28

Oh, I've just remembered dessert trolleys!!!!

Now there's a blast from the past! Eyeing it up as it was pushed past you onto other diners and hoping that the Black Forest Gateau would still be there when you'd finished your Tournedos Rosini. And that dithering and deciding as to what to have and wondering if you could ask for a little bit of each!

MiniMoon Wed 05-Aug-20 20:30:48

what is re opex? I'm sure I wrote recipes!

MiniMoon Wed 05-Aug-20 20:30:05

I'm a great fan of great british chefs. Ive made lots of re opex from their site. Its usually the first one I look at when planning a new recipe.

kittylester Wed 05-Aug-20 20:28:11

If we went out for posh meal the starter was often orange juice or tomato juice.DH Aand I once went for a meal where the waitress refused to let us have our pudding until we had finished our main course wine.

Oh, I've just remembered dessert trolleys!!!!

Urmstongran Wed 05-Aug-20 19:33:32

This was a witchy thread kitty as I was thinking about the name of the dish that was steak topped with rich pate only the other night. I think I was drifting off to sleep trying to remember it then forgot about it the next morning (as you do). It was very popular in steakhouses in the late 70’s. A retro dish indeed.
?

merlotgran Wed 05-Aug-20 19:32:22

Elegran

Compared to parents we WERE sophisticated! Sometimes my mother would make a curry - an ordinary stew with a spoonful of curry powder in it. They ate it with potatoes and carrots or runner beans, as well as the rice.

My mother's curries were like that and a curious shade of green but at least she left out the potatoes in favour of glutinous rice.

She then topped the lot with dessicated coconut, sliced banana and onion rings. hmm

geekesse Wed 05-Aug-20 19:32:18

The tournedos cut is the thinner end of the fillet.

kittylester Wed 05-Aug-20 19:24:38

I'm not sure that foie grass is PC currently. And, I think the Tournedos is a specific cut to be authentic.

geekesse Wed 05-Aug-20 19:08:56

It’s easy. Toast at the bottom, foie gras (not pate - a slice of whole foie gras), then fillet steak. To get it right, the toast, foie gras and steak need to be the same size. Beef stock and wine reduction as sauce. I like it with chips and peas, but I’m a pleb. Probably ought to be potatoes dauphinois and heritage carrots or some such.

Missfoodlove Wed 05-Aug-20 18:36:25

I suggest serving with a well chilled Gaviscon.

spottybook Wed 05-Aug-20 17:56:37

Ooh that takes me back. We had a Registry wedding in the mid 70s with just our parents and two close friends. We then went to a “posh” restaurant for lunch and had Tournedos Rossini. Hope you find a suitable recipe.

Framilode Wed 05-Aug-20 17:41:51

Elegran My mother always used to add a couple of spoons of Bisto to her curry and call it African curry. She didn't like the colour of normal curry.

Elegran Wed 05-Aug-20 17:28:31

Compared to parents we WERE sophisticated! Sometimes my mother would make a curry - an ordinary stew with a spoonful of curry powder in it. They ate it with potatoes and carrots or runner beans, as well as the rice.

kittylester Wed 05-Aug-20 17:18:36

I think that's why DH fancies it at the moment Elegran. A blast from the past!!

I will use fillet steak and duck pate.

Steak Diane was another favourite. And we did think we were sophisticated!!

Elegran Wed 05-Aug-20 17:06:52

It was a "posh meal out" in the sixties, when there weren't so many exotic dishes on the menu to choose from.

Elegran Wed 05-Aug-20 17:05:13

"Fennel* Tournedos steak is a special cut, but I would imagine fillet steak would approximate to it. It is the combination of the tender steak, the melting pate on top of it, and the madeira sauce that is so delicious.

Elegran Wed 05-Aug-20 17:02:31

When I cooked it (making it up as I went along, as this was a long time ago and I couldn't search the internet for a recipe) I used a good quality "ordinary" smooth pate, not foie gras, and some red wine, not madeira. Perhaps it wasn't quite as wonderful as the professional version, but it was pretty damn good. We drank the rest of the wine with it.

Fennel Wed 05-Aug-20 16:59:37

I've never cooked anything like that. Sounds delicious. Do you need a special cut of beef?
The few times I've cooked steaks they were very tough.
ps just read MiniMoon's recipe shock - way beyond my range.

Chewbacca Wed 05-Aug-20 16:46:24

No idea how you cook it but I'd love to know too. Must be 40 years since I last had it and I can remember it like yesterday.

Greeneyedgirl Wed 05-Aug-20 16:42:12

Have never heard of Tournedos Rossini but sounds really delicious - sans fois gras am afraid.

Thank you so much MiniMoon for the brilliant link to great British chefs. I am not a domestic goddess, far from in fact, but posts like this are a real inspiration smile.