Beef Tips and Gravy combine tender beef chunks, mushrooms, onions, and garlic in a rich and smooth brown gravy that is lightly seasoned. It is quick to prepare, mouthwateringly delicious, and made without canned soup.
Serve this comfort food dish over mashed potatoes, egg noodles, or rice. I love to serve it with a side of sauteed asparagus or roasted broccoli and French baguettes with sweet cream butter.
Ingredient Notes and Substitutions
See the complete list of ingredients below on the recipe card.
- Beef: Purchase good-quality beef tenderloin, petite shoulder, or steak. You can also use porterhouse or T-bone steak. I do not recommend beef stew meat for this recipe as it is usually cut from the chuck roast, and it needs to be cooked low and slow to tenderize like in a stew.
- Butter: salted or unsalted
- Mushrooms: look for firm, blemish-free, and smooth mushrooms. They should be dry to the touch but not dried out. This recipe works with both cremini and white button mushrooms.
- Red wine: This is optional but recommended. Choose a dry, medium—to light-bodied red. Good choices are Merlot, Pinot Noir, or Cabernet. Always use wine of good quality—in other words, one that you would enjoy a glass of.
How to make Beef Tips and Gravy
This is the summary version; see the recipe card below for the complete list of ingredients and the instructions.
First, generously salt and pepper the beef chunks. Then, heat the olive oil over medium-high heat in a Dutch oven or large skillet. Brown and sear the beef chunks on all sides. Work in batches so you do not crowd the pan. Plate the browned beef chunks, reserve any pan juices, and cover to keep warm.
Then, melt the butter in the pot over medium heat. Add the mushrooms and cook for a few minutes. Add the onions and cook until they soften and the mushrooms turn a nice golden brown. Reduce the heat to low, add the garlic, and cook for one additional minute. Remove everything from the pan and place it with the beef chunks on the plate.
Pour the red wine into the pot and scrape it with a wooden spoon to remove all those tasty brown bits from the bottom and sides. Gently simmer the wine and reduce it by half. Stir in the beef broth, Worcestershire sauce, and soy sauce. Bring the mixture to a boil and then reduce to a simmer. Combine the cornstarch and the water in a small bowl or measuring cup. Slowly pour it into the simmering mixture while stirring.
Add the mushroom mixture and beef tips with any pan juices back to the skillet and gently simmer for 10 minutes to thicken the mixture and finish cooking the beef. Season with salt and freshly cracked black pepper to taste. Serve over noodles, rice, or mashed potatoes. Garnish with chopped fresh thyme or fresh parsley.
Preparation Tips and Storage
- If the gravy becomes too thick upon simmering, add a few tablespoons of beef broth to thin it out.
- This recipe works well with the wine and the mushrooms. They add a depth of flavor that really shines through.
- Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days. Reheat on the stovetop over low heat or in the microwave at reduced power.
Serving Suggestions
I love to serve these tips with garlic mashed potatoes, loaded baked potatoes, or funeral potatoes. For vegetable side dishes, we love honey-roasted carrots and green beans almondine. Homemade dinner rolls or butter swim biscuits are perfect for sopping up all that gravy.
Crock Pot Cooking Method
Please remember that this method works better with stew meat and chuck roast. These cuts have more fat and collagen, so they benefit significantly from being cooked low and slow.
- Brown the beef and cook the mushrooms, onion, and garlic in the pot per the directions. Add the red wine, loosen the brown bits, and reduce.
- Add the beef, vegetables, and reduced wine to the crock pot. Add the beef broth, Worcestershire Sauce, and soy sauce.
- Cook on high for 3-4 hours or low for 7-8 hours.
- Turn the crock pot to high. Make the cornstarch slurry by combining the water and cornstarch until smooth. Stir it into the crock pot with the beef and vegetables. Cook for a few minutes or until thickened.
Freeze and Reheat
Beef tips and gravy freeze very well. First, cool completely. Then, spoon the contents into a zipper bag or freezer container and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw in the fridge overnight.
Reheat on the stovetop over low heat or in the microwave at reduced power.
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Beef Tips and Gravy Recipe
Ingredients
- 1 ½ lbs beef tenderloin sirloin tips, or petite shoulder cut in bite-size pieces
- Salt and freshly ground black pepper
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 3 tablespoons butter
- ½ lb sliced cremini mushrooms or white mushrooms
- ½ cup finely chopped onion
- 3 cloves garlic minced
- ⅓ cup dry red wine optional
- 2 cups low sodium beef broth
- 1 tablespoon Worcestershire Sauce
- 1 tablespoon soy sauce
- 3 tablespoons cornstarch
- ¼ cup cold water
Instructions
- Generously salt and pepper the beef chunks. Heat the olive oil over medium in a Dutch oven or large skillet. Brown the beef chunks on all sides. Work in batches so you do not crowd the pan adding more oil if needed. Plate the browned beef, reserve any pan juices and cover to keep warm.
- Melt the butter in the pot. Add the mushrooms and cook for a few minutes. Add the onions and cook until they start to soften and the mushrooms turn a nice golden brown. Add the garlic and cook for 1 additional minute. Remove everything from the pan and place it on the plate with the beef chunks.
- Pour the red wine into the pot and scrape it with a wooden spoon to get all those tasty brown bits from the bottom and sides of it. Gently simmer the wine and reduce it by half. Stir in the beef broth, Worcestershire sauce, and soy sauce. Bring the mixture to a boil and then reduce to a simmer.
- Combine the cornstarch and the water in a small bowl or measuring cup. Slowly pour it into the simmering mixture while stirring.
- Add the mushroom mixture and beef tips with any pan juices back to the skillet and gently simmer for 10 minutes to thicken the mixture and finish cooking the beef. Season with salt and freshly cracked black pepper to taste. Serve over noodles, rice, or mashed potatoes. Garnish with chopped fresh thyme or parsley.
Video
Notes
- If the gravy becomes too thick upon simmering, add a few tablespoons of beef broth to thin it out.
- This recipe works well with the wine and the mushrooms. They add a depth of flavor that really shines through.
- Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days. Reheat on the stovetop over low heat or in the microwave at reduced power.
Nutrition
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René
Hi,
Made this dish with ground 93/7 beef, don’t laugh, for toothless granny. Making tiny just meat meatballs and rather than a baggie to coat in flour used a plate to roll those balls around til coated. Other than that followed your steps and rather than simmering in the pan turned all into a small crockpot, don’t know when she will be ready eat. The dish simmered about two hours on low. Served them over egg noodles and have been told to make this again real soon. Thanks for this easy recipe.
Beth Pierce
You are most welcome. Glad that you like it! Hey ground beef is very economical so I can not blame you there. I will have to give it a try with ground beef!
Jess
Oh my gosh!! This is SO tasty,
I made it almost to a T – the only changes were that I had stew beef on hand so in the final step, I added 2 cups of water and simmered for an extra 20 minutes to make tenderize the meat (it could’ve used longer really), I added a little extra wine and one T of A1 Steak Sauce.
I could not get enough! I HATE mushrooms with a passion and I ate them because the flavor was so good. Thank you! Will definitely make again!
Beth Pierce
Thanks so much Jess! So glad that you liked the recipe! I love a cook that can improvise!
VICKY A ANDERSEN
This recipe looks great – can you tell me what kind of Red Wine to use as I don’t know much about Red Wine. Also what is petite shoulder? Is that a shoulder steak? Thanks for your help and look forward to making this soon.
Beth Pierce
Thanks so much. You should go with a dry red wine like a Merlot or Pinot Noir.
VICKY A ANDERSEN
Thanks for your reply
Beth Pierce
I can see I forgot to answer your petite shoulder question.
A tender, juicy muscle from the shoulder near the top blade
You can certainly sub any kind of good quality beef like tenderloin.
tiph
Delicious. I skipped the mushrooms but cooked the onions a little longer. Also I replaced the flour with corn starch to avoid the wheat and it worked just fine. Another time I made this I subbed half of the can of beef stock for half a can of coconut milk and used the other half to make coconut mashed potatoes to have with the beef&gravy. It was great!
Beth Pierce
Those are all very interesting tips. I think that some who are skipping the mushrooms are ending up with a less flavorful dish. However your idea of cooking the onion longer for flavor and using cornstarch instead of flour is great for those who don’t like mushrooms. I love mushrooms so I add them every time. Did you add the wine?
Amy C.
I’m making this right now, as shown, but without mushrooms, and it smells like nothing and tastes like flour. ?
Beth Pierce
I am sorry to hear that Amy. Did you use the wine? I may have to modify this post as it may be one of those recipes that needs the mushrooms and the wine. I have received good comments from readers when they use both.
Janet Cook
Just found you. Brought home leftover prime beef from work so gonna try it only have frozen red capped scabers from last year’s pickings hope they do well, wish me luck.
Beth Pierce
Good luck. I have had some concerns on the amount of flour. Do not add the flour from the bag after coating the beef. Shake any excess flour off the beef. I remove it from the bag with tongs and give it a gentle shake.
Cheryl
Thins was absolutely delectable!! Mine came out perfect. I used corn starch instead of flour. Thanks for sharing!
Beth Pierce
My pleasure. So glad that you liked it!! Thank you!
Jamie Lee
I’m a mother of five and three are in their teens….love how you have your measurements to be easily multiplied. I’m a stay at home mom with a very busy life with a sever person family…so for this to be a one pan meal…I will be looking more of your meals up…lets see how this one turns out!
Beth Pierce
Thanks so much. I try to make things easy for people. I know how busy people are and I totally get it.
Knirps
I was making magic with this recipe until I hit the gravy…
Mushrooms were canned, chopped fresh onions, butter, garlic, first part easy. Great aroma.
Second part I had stew meat which I cut large chunks in half for more even cooking. Coated in flour, salt, pepper, added a little smoked paprika because that’s our jam. Browned fine. …but nothing left in the pan for deglazing.
Get to the deglaze part and I didn’t have red wine and as mentioned in the comments, I skipped it entirely. Went straight to broth and woish. Adding the 1/4c flour to the 1/2c set aside broth instantly thickened and was almost white. I was uhohing. Added it to the scarcely wet pan and it was again, instant thick gravy almost white. Added some more broth but there was no way I was getting dark brown savory gravy. I knew it would be different without wine but that’s night and day… Wasn’t enough for any sort of ‘simmer’ to happen. I ended up making another side of ‘gravy’ to go on it since it seemed a bit dry…but it has no flavor. Haha.
I guess I just don’t have enough southern in me.
Beth Pierce
Wowzer! I absolutely love how you describe this whole thing. A couple of questions..did you use beef broth? I think the mushrooms may have played a roll in this. I always use fresh shrooms. Also I don’t use a heavy nonstick skillet since no browned bits end up on the bottom. I think you might have had a different result if you had some moisture in the pan in place of the red wine…like more beef broth. Stew meat is very lean where steak and even tenderloin have some fat to them. Steak also adds considerably more taste to the dish. I am so sorry that this did not work out for you but I love how you told me about the whole thing.
Sabrina
When you add the beef after coating with flour do you just take the coated beef out of bag and put it into pan, or do you put the beef and the additional flour from bag in pan as well?
Also how important is the Worcestershire sauce?
Beth Pierce
Do not add the extra flour. I remove with tongs and shake the rest flour off and discard. If you forgot it at the store I would not run out for it.
Robb Gentry
Absolutely delish! It’s going into my 2 week meal plan rotation. With my illness and ALL of the meds I’m on, I need a spicy meal to just taste my food. Thank you so much for the recipe
Simple cooking.
Robb
Beth Pierce
Oh I am so glad that you liked. You are most welcome. Sorry to hear about your illness. I will add you to my prayer list!
Robb Gentry
It’s cooking on the range top, now. The whole back of the house smells delicious, as I speak.
More, later.
Beth Pierce
So glad it is making the house smell yummy!
Robb Gentry
Turned COLD in South Texas in March 20th, today. I wanted something warm n yummy. I ran into your recipe doing a Google search. Making it, today, can’t wait to tear into it. I’m a cancer patient, working on keeping my weight up so, I can’t wait to tear into it (Yes, I wrote that TWICE). I’ll follow up after lunch, later, today.
Beth Pierce
Cold here too!!
Tammy
Very good recipe but I will not flour the meat next time. I ended up with a potpie omg
Beth Pierce
Glad that you liked the recipe sorry to hear that it turned out so thick. I might have to make that again soon and see if I might lessen the amount of flour to maybe 1-2 tablespoons.
janice pahl
oh my gosh!!! this is so good! I added a small pinch of thyme I saw on one of the comments. I served it on brown rice. my family could eat this every night including mwah!! You have a new subscriber to your blog…..my this is so good
Beth Pierce
You are much too kind. I am so glad that you and your family liked it. Makes my day to hear comments like this! LOVE IT!!!!
Natalie B
can I use French onion soup instead of beef broth? That is all I have on hand at the moment
Beth Pierce
Yes you can. Sorry about the delay. I was grocery shopping!
Alice Almond
I used venison instead of beef and omitted the red wine. It turned out delicious!! Thanks for the great recipe!!
Beth Pierce
My pleasure. I am so glad that you liked it!
Mary
Omg, I bet deer meat was amazing. May I ask which cut of the venison u used. I have some roast and maybe some back strap in the freezer. Thanks in advance.
Bobbie
How do I remedy the beef tips I got a little to salty my own fault. It’s an awesome receip.
Beth Pierce
You could try adding a little NO SALT beef broth but it is hard to find. Not sure how thick your gravy is but you could add a little bit of water.