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Recipe

Beef Stroganoff

Tender seared beef and mushrooms in a silky sour cream sauce, finished with a little mustard and served over noodles. Cozy, fast, and wildly comforting.

Author By Marilyn Volture
4.8
A skillet of creamy beef stroganoff with mushrooms and a glossy sour cream sauce, spooned over egg noodles on a plate in warm kitchen light

Beef Stroganoff is one of those meals that makes your kitchen smell like you have your life together. In reality, it is just smart timing, a hot pan, and a sauce that tastes like it simmered for hours even if you made it on a Tuesday with one sock missing.

This version is classic in spirit but practical in execution: quick-seared beef (so it stays tender), mushrooms that actually brown (not steam sadly), and a creamy tangy sauce built on beef broth, a little Dijon, and sour cream stirred in off the heat so it stays smooth. Serve it over egg noodles, mashed potatoes, or whatever cozy carb is currently earning your trust.

Sliced seared steak and browned mushrooms in a skillet with onions, ready for sauce to be added

Why It Works

  • Tender beef, not rubber: We sear quickly and finish gently in the sauce instead of boiling it into sadness.
  • Deep savory flavor fast: Browning mushrooms and deglazing the pan pulls all the good bits into the sauce.
  • Silky, balanced creaminess: Sour cream goes in off the heat, plus Dijon and Worcestershire for that “wait, what is that?” depth.
  • Weeknight-flexible: Works with sirloin, ribeye, or even ground beef if you need a budget pivot.

Storage Tips

How to Store and Reheat

Fridge: Cool leftovers, then store in an airtight container for up to 3 days.

Freezer: You can freeze it, but creamy sauces can separate. If you plan to freeze, consider holding back the sour cream and stirring it in after reheating. Frozen stroganoff keeps up to 2 months.

Reheat: Warm gently on the stove over low heat with a splash of beef broth or water. Stir often. Avoid a hard boil or the sour cream can break.

Noodles tip: Store noodles separately if possible so they do not soak up all the sauce like a tiny pasta sponge.

Common Questions

FAQ

What cut of beef is best for stroganoff?

Sirloin is the weeknight hero: tender enough, reasonably priced, and cooks quickly. Ribeye is luxurious. Tenderloin is excellent but usually overkill unless you are feeling fancy on purpose.

Can I use ground beef?

Yes. Brown it well, drain excess fat if needed, then proceed. You will lose the steakhouse vibe but gain true pantry-weeknight energy.

Why add sour cream at the end?

Sour cream can curdle if it boils. Taking the pan off the heat first keeps the sauce smooth and creamy.

Can I make it without mushrooms?

Absolutely. Swap in extra onions, a handful of peas at the end, or sautéed bell peppers. It will not be “classic,” but neither is eating over the sink and we do that too.

How do I thicken the sauce?

The flour helps, but if you want it thicker: simmer a few minutes longer, or mix 1 teaspoon cornstarch with 1 tablespoon cold water and stir it in while the sauce is gently bubbling (before adding sour cream).

Do I have to use pasta water?

Nope. It is optional, just a handy way to loosen the sauce if it gets too thick while you are finishing the beef. A splash of broth works too.

Is paprika “traditional”?

Many versions use it. If you want that classic warmth, add 1 teaspoon paprika with the flour.

The first time I made beef stroganoff, I thought it was a “special occasion” dish, like you needed a tablecloth and restaurant-level technique. Turns out, it is mostly just a creamy sauce and confidence. Now it is my go-to when I want dinner to feel a little dramatic without actually doing anything dramatic, like making a second pan. Also, it is the rare meal where leftovers somehow taste even more like a hug the next day.