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Home » All » By Course » Stews » Bernard’s beef daube or French beef stew with red wine

Bernard’s beef daube or French beef stew with red wine

By Layla Pujol 27 Comments

Beef daube is a classic Provencal or Southern French stew made with beef, onions, tomatoes, carrots, red wine, and herbs. 

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Beef stew with red wine - French daube

En Español

Bernard is my father in law and he is one of the best cooks I know. He’s the type of person that spends the whole morning carefully making the perfect sauce and braising meat slowly and patiently. To top it off he always serves each dish with a great wine.

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Daube is one of Bernard’s signature dishes: he’s done it for decades and is an expert at it. One of my favorite parts about visiting Nico’s family in Aix-en-Provence is all the amazing food -especially the homemade food- that we get to try. Nico’s parents visited us in 2008 for a few weeks and I had two items on the top of my list of dishes that I wanted them to teach me how to make: Monique’s leek tart, it is the best leek tart ever, I promise to share the recipe soon; and Bernard’s beef daube. They also prepared a great chicken and zucchini pasta dish, one of the best artichoke dishes, among many more that I hope to share as soon as I can document and photograph them.

With this classic French beef stew from the south of France, it is all about long slow cooking, you start early morning and finish for lunch time. Bernard believes that the quality of ingredients is very important: “when you have good ingredients it’s hard to mess up the dish”.

Provenzal beef stew or daube recipe

I’ve prepared this beef daube a few times already, it is very easy to prepare, and makes such a wonderful dish for this cold time of the year. Most daubes are made using beef, but can also be made with lamb. We went grocery shopping to Pike Place Market to the find the ingredients for our daube, Bernard was trying to explain the exact cut of beef that he used to make daube, which turned out to be shank – or the leg. While you can make daube with other types of beef cuts, Bernard likes to use shank because of that gelatinous consistency it has. This helps thicken the sauce and since the meat is cooked for a long time it gets very tender.

Daube recipe

Now, I discovered that at least in the US, shank is not that easy to find, and even once we found a butcher that had some in stock he had it in the back, he explained that it is more common to grind it up and sell it ground than to sell it in pieces. The good thing is that the meat was very inexpensive and it reminded me that in Ecuador we use beef shank in a lot of soups, especially those that are cooked for a long time, the combination of the bone and collagen gives the broth a lot of flavor.

Shank can be bought either with the bone or boneless, both are good, I like it with the bone because I really think that bones add a ton of flavor to any dish, but my husband has this thing about bones and prefers it boneless, so sometimes I please him and sometimes I don’t, either way the daube turns out great.

Beef daube or French beef stew recipe

Beef daube or Provencal/French beef stew

Easy recipe for beef daube, a classic Provencal or Southern French stew made with beef, onions, tomatoes, carrots, red wine, and herbs.
4.69 from 38 votes
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Course: Main Course
Cuisine: European, French, International, Provenzal
Keyword: Beef shank, Beef stew, Daube, Provenzal stew, Red wine
Prep Time: 30 minutes
Cook Time: 3 hours
Total Time: 3 hours 30 minutes
Servings: 6 -8 portions

Ingredients

  • 4 lbs beef shank with or without bones, cut in large chunks
  • 1 ½ large red onions sliced
  • 3-4 tbs olive oil
  • 10 roma tomatoes peeled, seeded and diced, or 2 cans of diced tomatoes
  • 6-7 carrots peeled and sliced
  • 1 ½ – 2 cups red wine
  • 1 tbs herbes de Provence or mix of dried thyme, marjoram, sage, rosemary, basil, etc
  • 1 tbs whole anise seeds
  • Salt and pepper

To serve:

  • Pastas rice or potatoes

Instructions

  • Heat the olive oil in a large sauté pan, add the meat chunks and brown them on each side.
  • Remove the meat from the pan and set aside for later.
  • Add the onions slices to the pan and cook until caramelized.
  • Add the browned meat chunks back to the pan with the onions
  • Add the tomatoes, carrots, wine, herbs, anise seeds, salt and pepper.
  • Simmer for 2 to 3 hours or until the meat is very tender and the sauce has thickened.
  • Serve with warm pastas or rice/potatoes.

Nutrition

Serving: 1g
Beef daube or French beef stew recipe

I’ve seen recipes for daube that add a lot of different vegetables, but Bernard’s daube keeps it very simple: onions, tomatoes, carrots, herbs and wine.When he prepared the daube he used canned tomatoes, he said he didn’t want to waste my good fresh tomatoes – which he thought would be better for salads where you can appreciate their flavor. When I recreated the dish on my own I used fresh tomatoes instead, and there wasn’t really a difference in the taste, so now if I have fresh tomatoes and the time/patience to peel them I use them and if not I just use the canned diced tomatoes.

How to make daube

The daube is seasoned with herbes de Provence, which is a mix of dried herbs that are typical from the Provence region in France, it is easy to find them in the dried herb and spice section at most supermarkets, I usually stock up when we visit France and have family or friends who visit bring us some, you can also just mix your own using dried thyme, rosemary, marjoram, oregano, basil, sage, lavender, fennel. The exact proportions of dried herbs and which are used tends to vary from one brand to another, but thyme is usually predominant.

Bernard preparing daube

Bernard also likes to add some anise seeds to his daube; I think this is part of his signature touch. Daube is typically served with pastas, though the South American in me keeps thinking that it would also be wonderful with rice.

French beef daube recipe

Finally, it goes without saying that this dish should be enjoyed with a nice glass of red wine, I asked Nico for his wine recommendation: “since this is a meat dish and it includes wine within the meal, you’ll want something full flavored yet not overwhelming. A zinfandel will be full bodied but might saturate your appetite quickly. Rather, a Bordeaux (St Emilion Grand Cru) or a Cotes du Rhone (Chateauneuf du Pape) will do most excellent. If you’re looking for a budget bottle, Bogle makes good wines that can be found all over the US. If you’re from the Pacific Northwest, a local Cabernet will be just fine.”

Merci Bernard pour la recette!

Beef daube or French beef stew

Step by step preparation photos for beef daube or French provencal beef stew

Beef shank for daube
Brown the meat
Cook the onions
Brown the onions for the beef stew
Tomatoes and carrots for the stew
Add some herbes de Provence to the daube
Add red wine to the daube
Beef daube preparation
Serve with pastas
Beef daube
French daube recipe
Daube
Provencal beef daube recipe
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Filed Under: All, Beef, Comfort food, Cooking with wine, Europe, Fall, France, Main dishes, Meat, Stews, Winter

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Comments

  1. Gaby says

    September 29, 2013 at 8:49 am

    Hi layita it looks so delicious ! Can’t wait to try it. I want to make this recipe for lunch. Quick question do you think it would go well with rice instead of pasta?

    Reply
    • Layla Pujol says

      September 29, 2013 at 11:41 am

      Hi Gaby – Yes, it will go great with rice – especially because the rice will soak up the juices from the stew better than the pastas.

      Reply
  2. Veronica says

    May 12, 2013 at 8:07 am

    Hi laylita, trying this now. When using canned tomatoes, so we drain juice out?

    Reply
    • Layla Pujol says

      May 13, 2013 at 1:27 pm

      You can if you want to, but don’t have to.

      Reply
  3. sam says

    July 30, 2012 at 5:46 am

    Hi Laylita
    can I substitute red wine because I can’t cook with !!

    Reply
    • Laylita says

      July 30, 2012 at 8:38 am

      Hi Sam – You can use a good quality beef stock and some tomato juice.

      Reply
  4. margot says

    April 6, 2011 at 8:44 am

    another question… what size can of diced tomatoes should be used? thanks…

    Can size is 14.5 oz

    Reply
  5. margot says

    April 6, 2011 at 8:37 am

    delicious! can you tell me please how many people this will serve? thank you!

    Most recipes on this site are for 8-10 people.

    Reply
  6. Elizabeth says

    December 11, 2010 at 3:47 pm

    Found your website a few hours ago and am now simmering the beef daube. I loved the way your photos progress throughout the making of the dish. I hope my son & fiance like it, since they are coming over for dinner!

    Reply
  7. Luke says

    October 7, 2010 at 5:13 pm

    I made this recipe for my grandmother after she told me the best meal she ever had was beef en daube. i made it in a crock pot. Once again grandma was right. this was AWESOME!!!!! Making it this weekend for some special friends.

    Reply
  8. Gael says

    September 9, 2010 at 10:07 am

    I have the opposite situation you have. Beef shank was easy for me to find but recipes were hard to come by. I keep finding osso bucco but that needs veal shank. I found this recipe and it looks good. I read that people add anchovies too so I’m going to do that since I have a good tin. I don’t have anise seed but I do have a bottle of Pernod. Do you think that would be a good substitute?

    Hi Gael – You could add a tbs of Pernod to the stew, it is also good without the anise seeds.

    Reply
  9. Reaz says

    October 16, 2009 at 2:41 pm

    I come from Mauritius,overthere we make la daube too which we’ve inherited from the french.

    Reply
  10. East says

    April 14, 2009 at 10:32 am

    I’m making this right now. Can’t wait. You might want to emphasize the SIMMER part. If you boil the meat it will become tough and not cook properly; boiling the meat is the death of all slow-cooked meat dishes.

    Reply
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My name is Layla Pujol, my family and friends call me Laylita. I was born in Vilcabamba, Ecuador and currently live in Luxembourg. Read More…

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