Thereâs a reason Gordon Ramsayâs famous beef Wellington costs $119 dollars and change per person.
First off, itâs a complex dish to make that marries high-quality ingredients in a visually stunning way.Â
You take a beef tenderloin â the most expensive, most tender cut of beef around â and marry it to a luxurious mushroom duxelles. Then the whole thing is wrapped in a puff of buttery, flaky pastry, usually decorated with an elegant pattern, and then baked until golden outside and 105 degrees inside.Â
Then this royal dish rests for 20 minutes, during which time it will rise to the temperature of a medium-rare steak.
As any chef will tell you, the original recipe that was the Duke of Wellingtonâs favorite is an intricate, time-consuming dish and a pain to prepare. But, done right, itâs massively impressive.
With a few smart changes, it doesnât really have to be such a chore. And it can even be fun, as a small group of people who gathered recently at Cheyenneâs Railspur restaurant found out. They came to learn this fancy holiday classic from Juan Coronado, the restaurantâs co-owner and head chef.
Coronado likens beef Wellington to another classic dish he loves, the tamale. He calls them both labors of love. Time-consuming, but worth it.Â
Like beef Wellington, though, tamales arenât that difficult to make, he said. There are just multiple steps interspersed with multiple bouts of steaming.Â
Coronado comes by his tamale making honestly. He learned all about making them not from culinary school, but from his grandma, cooking alongside her as a young man on an old wood stove.
âMy tamale recipe is my grandmotherâs,â he said. âAnd I started in high school, and figured I was OK at it. Then I started doing competitions, and it was something that I really enjoyed.â
That led him to cooking school in Denver, and to high-end restaurants like Panzano in the Mile High City.Â
He found his way to Cheyenne in 2019 to The Metropolitan Downtown, but eventually opened his own restaurant with fellow chef, Seth Stefanik. Railspur has quickly become a culinary hotspot in Cheyenne. Itâs located on the West Edge, in a part of downtown that was once considered blighted.
Class In Session
But you donât have to be a chef with culinary training to make beef Wellington shine, Coronado said. In fact, all of the people who joined his class were pretty much rank amateurs, including this reporter.Â
No one in the group had ever even tried to prepare beef Wellington before.
Itâs just too complex and intimidating. A headache-inducing dish in most cookbooks, if ever there was one. It needed some tweaks to become fun. And that is exactly what Coronado brought to the beef Wellington table.
âThis is all for myself,â Eli Vurgess declared during the class, joking a little, as he spread his seared beef tenderloin with a thick smear of tasty mustard. âIâm not making this for family. They donât get this.â
He actually is going to share his newly acquired beef Wellington dish soon, though, at an upcoming dinner party with friends, where he plans to serve the most impressive dish heâs ever learned to make.
âI was telling them Iâve wanted to make one of these for the longest time,â he said. âBut I never got the right cut of meat or didnât get focused enough. And I always felt like I need to do it just right. I didnât want to like do it halfway.â
Clay Van Houten and his daughter Savannah Van Houten, meanwhile, had been hearing friends talk about the cooking classes at Railspur and how much fun they are.Â
So, when they saw the beef Wellington class they decided to just sign up and see what itâs all about.
âWeâre doing this one tonight, and then weâre doing the one Thursday as well, the chocolate making,â Clay said. âThatâs another one where weâre like, âItâs perfect for the holidays.ââ
Kristin Harding, like Vurgess, has always wanted to learn to make beef Wellington, ever since seeing her stepmom make it. She and her stepmom have a friendly little rivalry going in their respective kitchens.
âSheâs taken meat from our ranch and made beef Wellington for other family members,â Harding said. âBut not for me. And so now Iâm gonna be like, Iâm gonna send (pictures) of mine to her.â
In fact, Harding was already taking some photos during the class, and even some videos with a sly little grin.
Harding took the class with her husband, Kiel. The couple own the Harding Ranch in Meriden, Wyoming, near Cheyenne, and they actually supplied all the delicious beef for the class.Â
Kiel said the ranch jumped into direct-to-consumer sales during the pandemic, after receiving lots of calls from people who couldnât find beef at the supermarket.Â
Now they not only have a hundred or so loyal customers who order their beef online, but they also supply Coronadoâs restaurant Railspur with high-quality beef that has been locally raised.Â
A Slice Of Italy
Chef Coronado has his own little tricks to bring the flavor to his accessible beef Wellington recipe.
He recommends, for example, using authentic prosciutto di Parma above all others, which can usually be found in the deli section of a supermarket â if the grocer has it. This is a special kind of prosciutto produced in the Emilia-Romagna region of Italy and famous for its delicate, slightly sweet flavor.Â
âThe best ones Iâve had were from Parma,â he said. âThey have these massive buildings, like houses, with these big doors, where they just have all the prosciutto hanging. Once a day, they open the doors for the Italian air to flow through there, and I just feel like it gets that flavor, every time you open those doors.â
Coronado loves to introduce people to new ingredients. Itâs part of the food revolution he wants to bring to Wyoming, something he mentioned when he first came to Cheyenne in 2019 to open the Metropolitan.
âThereâs an article out there that quotes me saying that,â Coronado said. âAnd Iâm really proud to say thatâs what weâve done. Thereâs more food trucks that have opened. Thereâs more restaurants and Iâve seen more chefs who are out there. Itâs getting more competitive in the culinary world here, and weâre getting more food, and I love that. Itâs what I came here for.â
At some point, Coronado hopes to add a teaching kitchen to Railspur and start offering more next-level, interesting cooking classes.Â
Itâs OK to use another brand if you canât find that one, Coronado added. Thatâs just the one he likes best.
The chef also likes to add a little sherry or Marsala wine to the mushroom duxelles as heâs sautĂ©ing it, for a little more flavor, as well as a bit of grated parmesan cheese at the end, once all the liquids have been cooked away.Â
You donât want any moisture left, or it could make the pastry soggy later. So, cook the duxelles long and slow.
Here Come The Cocktails
One nice thing about a beef Wellington prep party is there are plenty of resting stages that are perfect for munching on crudités and sipping on cocktails, or even eating a whole beef dinner.
Thatâs what we all got to do during Chef Coronadoâs class.
Since Coronado had already prepared the duxelles for us, our prep work started with preparing the tenderloin itself. Cut off any thinner end portions, and remove any sinew, if needed. That just ensures uniform sizes, so that things will cook more evenly.
The end portions are perfect for something like a high-quality stir fry or sandwiches for later, so, obviously, donât throw any of that away. Save the scraps.
Coronado recommends cutting the tenderloin into a one- or two-serving portion size for ease of handling in a home kitchen. These cuts are tied with butcherâs twine, to help it keep its shape. They look like little Christmas packages of meat. Apropos for a dish thatâs, in itself, a holiday gift for whomever you prepare it for.
We took our little presents of meat to a grill station and gave them a nice sear on high heat and sprinkled them with coarse salt. Easy-peasy so far.
This step, by the way, is not about cooking the beef at all. Itâs just a bit of kitchen chemistry called the Maillard reaction. Browning brings a nice umami flavor to most any dish, and itâs a step no chef would ever skip, especially when it comes to beef Wellington.
After the sear, cool the tenderloin for about the same amount of time it would take to break out those aforementioned cocktails and crudites. Sing a few Christmas carols, too, if youâre getting into the spirit of things.Â
Once the tenderloin has cooled, remove the butcherâs twine and coat the tenderloins in a smear of English, Dijon, or other favorite mustard and set it aside. Lay out a couple slices of prosciutto on some plastic wrap in a roughly square shape thatâs large enough to wrap your mustard-covered tenderloin, and then spread the prosciutto with a quarter-inch thick layer of the mushroom duxelles. When making duxelles, itâs very important to cook it long and slow. It should be soft and luxurious, like a thick paste, and water free.
Place the tenderloin in the center of the prosciutto-duxelles wrapper and roll it up tightly with the plastic wrap. Now it gets to chill for a while in the refrigerator.Â
Just long enough for one more little cocktail.
Câmon, what could it hurt?
How Chefs Cheat
So, the next part of this beef Wellington dish seems like it could be the tricky part. Wrapping everything up in pastry, then decorating said pastry with an elegant pattern.Â
Hope you didnât have too many cocktails!
But it turns out, itâs not all that difficult. Itâs just as easy-peasy as the rest of the class has been. And thatâs because Chef Coronado knows how to cheat!
Not in any way that hurts the food. But in ways that save time and make things much more fun.
The first cheat is rather obvious. Just buy commercially prepared puff pastry. Puff pastry isnât really worth making homemade for most people. Itâs an obscure art and science, best left to the likes of heavenly angels, blessed saints and determined chefs.
So lay your cheat sheet of puff pastry out and then kind of roll it gently around the tenderloin to see how much of it is really needed. Make a mark where youâll make your cut, then reserve that left-over pastry for the next step.
After wrapping the tenderloin up so that itâs in its own little tube of pastry, pinch the ends up close to the steak. It will now look just a little bit like a giant piece of candy, wrapped in pastry. Trim most of the ends off this pastry wrapper and tuck what remains under the beef Wellington. That makes a nice, neat little package. Wash this with some beaten egg yolk to enhance the golden color when baked.
Now comes the tricky part perhaps ⊠decorating that puff pastry package with a lattice.Â
But actually as, it turns out, itâs not that tricky at all. Chef Coronado has yet another cheat. A handy little roller that cuts the pie lattice in one easy step. Who knew?
Now we have discovered the secret to how all those pie crusts on the cover of food magazines look so dang perfect every time.Â
These gadgets arenât even very expensive. Amazon has them for $11.99 and up. Any good kitchen shop in your neighborhood would likely also have them for an inexpensive price.Â
So, if you donât have one, go get one right now. Weâll wait until you get back.
Maybe even drink another cocktail while we wait âŠ
One Fell Swoop
OK, so now youâre good and ready to go with your own little pie lattice cutter. It will feel a bit like you are using a pizza cutter, but you want to press hard enough to make your lattice cut in a single go. Itâs just too difficult to line everything up for a second go.Â
Especially after how many cocktails was it?
After the cut, gently pull and stretch out the pastry and voila. Instant pie lattice. No effort at all.
Now wrap the lattice gently around the tenderloin just like you did the puff pastry sheet. Trim off the ends, and tuck everything under the beef Wellington package. Give it all another egg wash for good measure. You want it to look like pure gold on a plate.
At this point, the beef Wellington can be baked to the temperature of 105 degrees Fahrenheit. Rest it for 20 minutes. The temperature will rise during the resting phase, reaching medium-rare temperature. It can also be held overnight and then baked.Â
If you want to hold it longer than that, you could also freeze the beef Wellington for later use. In that case, be sure to thaw them out all the way before baking.
Bon appetite and Merry Christmas or Happy New Year.
Contact Renee Jean at renee@cowboystatedaily.com

Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.