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This Beef Rice Pilaf is the best I’ve tried. I appreciate discovering recipes that are a hit with my whole family (it’s never awesome to be in the kitchen for hours and then be the only one eating what you made because you feel too guilty to toss your efforts into the waste receptacle (doesn’t that sound better than garbage can?).
This recipe makes a big batch which is great since it reheats really well. That’s my favorite way to eat it; crisped over a skillet and served with a pickle. I’m not sure why but I crave pickles with plov.
We’ve been looking for a great beef plov recipe for a L-O-N-G time! Plov is originally an Uzbek dish, but every Ukrainian I know makes and loves plov and this is more the Ukrainian version. P.S. I do have a chicken plov recipe posted here (if you wanted a quicker plov recipe).
I discovered this recipe through Olga’s Blog. Guess what, she’s a nurse too! I guess nurses make good food ;), or maybe we just happen to have a lot in common. Olga is such an inspiration. I don’t think I would have ever gotten to know her if not for blogging. Olga your recipe was deeee-licious. My husband (being Mr creativity) tossed in some coriander which added a nice floral somethin’ somethin’. It’s a new favorite in our house!
Ingredients for Beef Rice Pilaf:
1 1/2 lbs Beef chuck, beef sirloin or good quality beef stew meat
1/3 cup canola oil, or extra light olive oil (not extra virgin)
2 medium onions, finely chopped
3 medium carrots, cut into matchsticks or grated
1 tsp salt for the meat and veggies + 1 1/2 tsp salt for the rice
1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper
1 tsp paprika
1 tsp cumin
3-4 bay leaves
1 3/4 cups hot water for braising meat
3 cups long grain rice (Basmati or Jasmin rice work great!)
4 cups hot water when cooking rice
1 head of garlic
1 tsp ground coriander
How to Make Beef Rice Pilaf:
1. Trim beef of excess fat and sinews (aka the chewy stuff), pat the meat dry with a paper towel and chop into 1/2″ to 3/4″ pieces.
2. Preheat your dutch oven (or your large soup pot with a heavy bottom), to high heat. Once it’s hot, stir in your 1/3 cup canola oil. Once oil is hot, add chopped meat and saute uncovered 7 min over high heat until meat is browned, stirring every minute or so so it doesn’t scorch to the bottom of the pan.
Note: it’s important to preheat the dutch oven first for the meat to sear over very high heat, otherwise it will juice out and become dry.
3. Reduce heat to medium and Add chopped onion, stirring often until onion is softened (5 minutes). Stir in sliced carrots, 1 tsp salt, 1/2 tsp pepper, 1 tsp paprika, 1 tsp cumin, 3-4 bay leaves and continue to cook over medium heat 5 minutes until carrots are softened.
4. Add 1 3/4 cups hot water, cover & simmer over medium/low heat 45 min or until meat is tender.
5. Meanwhile, rinse rice until water runs clear, then drain and set aside (this gets rid of the starch so you won’t end up with a sticky rice). Did I ever tell you I love my OXO strainer? This thing is so versatile (from sifting flour, rinsing and draining, to wearing it as a helmet and chasing your toddler around the house?
6. Spread rice over the meat and add 4 cups hot water. Sprinkle the rice with 1 1/2 tsp salt (DO NOT STIR), bring to a boil then reduce heat to low and Let cook uncovered until most of the water is absorbed (10 min).
7. Cut off the base of your whole garlic head to expose the cloves. Put your head of garlic, cut side down into the center of the rice and sprinkle the top of the rice with 1 tsp ground coriander
8. Poke 7-10 holes through the rice to allow steam to escape to the surface, reduce the heat to low, then cover and cook an additional 15 minutes or until rice is cooked through. Remove the garlic head and bay leaves and stir everything gently to combine and you’re done.
You should make it. As soon as possible. If you share my pickle cravings, add them to your shopping list for this one!
Beef Plov (Beef Rice Pilaf) Recipe
Ingredients
- 1 1/2 lbs Beef chuck, beef sirloin or good quality beef stew meat
- 1/3 cup canola oil, or extra light olive oil (not extra virgin)
- 2 medium onions, finely chopped
- 3 medium carrots, cut into matchsticks or grated
- 1 tsp salt for the meat and veggies + 1 1/2 tsp salt for the rice
- 1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper
- 1 tsp paprika
- 1 tsp cumin
- 3-4 bay leaves
- 1 3/4 cups hot water for braising meat
- 3 cups long grain rice, Basmati or Jasmin rice work great!
- 4 cups hot water when cooking rice
- 1 tsp ground coriander
- 1 head of garlic
Instructions
- Trim beef of excess fat and sinews (aka the chewy stuff), pat the meat dry with a paper towel and chop into 1/2" to 3/4" pieces.
- Preheat your dutch oven (or your large soup pot with a heavy bottom), to high heat. Once it's hot, stir in your 1/3 cup canola oil. Once oil is hot, add chopped meat and saute uncovered 7 min over high heat until meat is browned, stirring every minute or so so it doesn't scorch to the bottom of the pan. Note: it's important to preheat the dutch oven first for the meat to sear over very high heat, otherwise it will juice out and become dry.
- Reduce heat to medium and Add chopped onion, stirring often until onion is softened (5 minutes). Stir in sliced carrots, 1 tsp salt, 1/2 tsp pepper, 1 tsp paprika, 1 tsp cumin, 3-4 bay leaves and continue to cook over medium heat 5 minutes until carrots are softened.
- Add 1 3/4 cups hot water, cover and simmer over medium/low heat 45 min or until meat is tender.
- Meanwhile, rinse rice until water runs clear, then drain and set aside (this gets rid of the starch so you won't end up with a sticky rice).
- Spread rice over the meat and add 4 cups hot water. Sprinkle the rice with 1 1/2 tsp salt (DO NOT STIR), bring to a boil then reduce heat to low and Let cook uncovered until most of the water is absorbed (10 min).
- Cut off the base of your whole garlic head to expose the cloves. Put your head of garlic, cut side down into the center of the rice and sprinkle the top of the rice with 1 tsp ground coriander.
- Poke 7-10 holes through the rice to allow steam to escape to the surface, reduce the heat to low then cover and cook an additional 15 minutes or until rice is cooked through. Remove the garlic head and bay leaves and stir everything gently to combine and you're done.
Our family loves this recipe, so delicious with venison too. When out of whole meat I use mince.
Hi Louisa, I’m happy that your family loves this recipe. Thank you for the review!
Very easy, straightforward and the result is delicious! Thank you!!!
You’re welcome! I’m so glad you enjoyed it, Evgenii!
The recipe is spot on. I mostly impressed with cooking time. I had a friend, who cooked it on open fire. So despite having cravings for plov, I would never dare to cook it on stove. This was a success! To note – I made it with leg of lamp and it was beautiful. The only comment – if you like to eat garlic with plov, start cooking it 5-10 minutes before adding rice. This way it’s fully cooked and soft.
Hello Galia, thank you for sharing your good comments and feedback. We also appreciate your suggestions!
This recipe has been my go-to for deliciousness for about 5 or 6 years now. I stumbled across this when I was looking for a pilaf recipe and found it to be delicious. I tried a few times to modify it a little, with some fennel or star anise, but honestly, your recipe, just the way it is, is the best. We love crisping it in a pan with some olive oil and a fresh dill pickle the next day. (who am I kidding, we eat on this for a week) Interestingly enough, pickled ginger strips are AMAZING with this!
Yum! Totally craving this now! Thank you for your lovely review, Damon! I’m glad it’s your go-to!
Hello! I’m looking forward to trying this recipe, but first, does this dish freeze well in your experience? Also, what do you recommend to drink and to eat as side to this dish?
This recipe is delicious! I found your recipe on another site that said it was 410 calories/serving and the yield was 11 servings. How much is one serving?
Hi Anissa, this recipe should not be on any other site as it is original to us and it’s probably being copied somewhere without permission. It depends on how you are serving it as a main course or as a side dish.
Hi Natasha, I enjoyed making this meal. However, I accidentally burned the bottom of the pan both when stewing the meat for 45 minutes and then even more when cooking the rice. I have an electric stove and a 10.5 quart dutch oven… Any advice would be very appreciated!
Hi Wiley, I’m glad you enjoyed the process, but I’m sorry to hear it burned! Make sure you’re using a heavy bottom pan – like a dutch oven (it looks like you are). Each stove is made differently, and so is its heat source output. I would watch it closely and maybe set it to a slightly lower temp if you notice it keeps burning.
Hello. I would like to try the recipe today, but instead of beef can I use pork tenderloin?
Hi Emma, yes, pork would be a very good substitute.
I made it today and used the same Dutch over you are using and followed the recipe, and at the end was sad to see the bottom of my dutch oven with a pretty thick layer of black burned stuff 🙁 Do you think its because the heat of my stove is more intense for low or medium?
Hi Anna, that is possible. It’s hard to say without being there but that may be the culprit.
Has anyone made this with riced cauliflower? If not, any ideas? I absolutely LOVE this recipe, but the diabetics in my family won’t touch it because of the rice. Thanks in advance for any help!
I tried it. This will be in my regular meal rotation.
Great to hear that you liked this recipe, Matt! Thanks for sharing.
This is the first time this dish has come out the right way for me. I learned so much from your recipe!
That is so awesome and I’m happy to hear that!
FYI your recommended pots in your amazon list are no longer available.
Thank you for letting me know. It looks like they are currently out of stock. I’m seeing more and more of this happen as people shop online more.
Great and easy recipe. In adition I added half cup fresh chopped dill and parsley, yumm
Yum! Thank you so much for sharing that with me!
Hi. Cuisine: Central Asian, Asian and other cultures but Plov is not Russian cuisine
Can you point to a definitive and well-researched source that supports this claim? I like learning about food and cultural history.
I support this claim and instead of beef mutton is used
Like the above poster said, it orignates specifically from Uzbekistan, and has spread all through out Central Asia before being brought to Russia. Think about how the Brits took curry back with them from India. Same thing
Lol, if you really want to get technical about rice pilaf…it actually originated from Iran, Middle East, Eastern Europe! But then again, countless countries/cuisines have similar dishes just with different twists.
Sorry, but this is country food in Russia. I lived there and often ate it at a tiny restaurant in the middle of nowhere in Siberia. Perhaps it’s because we were in the part of Russian near Mongolia, but this is the plov we had there. No need to correct someone in this way. It’s bad manners and unnecessary, since the food is indeed made and eaten in Russia, especially in the rural areas.
So good. Followed recipe exactly. Excellent thanks so much!
Yay excellent! Thank you so much, Andy.
Do you use ground cumin or cumin seeds?
Also, I made the recipe exactly as you did but the rice came out like kasha. Do yo know what could have gone wrong?
Hi Patricia, we used cumin powder for this recipe. We have an image of it in the recipe post. I hope that is helpful. If you ended up cooking the rice longer in the end it would cause it to become mushier, you also don’t want to mix it during the cooking processes or it could get mushier. What kind of rice did you use and did you rinse it well before using?
Dear Natasha,
Which cut of lamb would you suggest for this recipe, and do I cook it exactly the same way as the beef?
Thank you,
A
Hi, something like a boneless leg of lamb would work.
Hi Natasha, Great recipe. Thank you, i’ve tried many from your website and I love them. I have a question, if I use only one cup of rice, what would the ratio of water be for the rice itself?
Thank You.
Hi Nicole, I haven’t tested that but I would scale it down proportionally.
What size Dutch oven do you use?
Hi Patricia, we used a large dutch oven. A 6-8 quart one would work great! We have our favorite dutch ovens listed in our Amazon Affiliate Shop HERE.
As expats, we lived in Central Asia for ten years. We were missing our plov! I followed your recipe exactly and when my daughters took their first bite, my youngest said, “It’s like we’re back in Kyrgyzstan!!”
I made this dish in my big metal Chinese wok. It’s was a great substitute for a kazan!
Thank you for sharing such an authentic recipe!
Wow, it’s so great to reminisce some good memories and good food makes us do that! Thanks for sharing that with us, Julie.
So tasty & super easy. This is a staple in our house. I have been making this with Venison mince, so good 🙂
So great to hear that! Thanks for sharing that with us.