Samantha Ferraro is the food blogger and photographer for The…
Flank steak loaded with caramelized onions, herbs, prosciutto, and parmesan cheese is slowly braised with a rich red wine sauce.
My favorite dish to use wine in is in a good hearty red pasta sauce. Every time I make a sauce, wine is always on the ingredient list. The flavor reduces and thickens with other aromatics and really offers amazing layered flavor.
This is an Italian dish where meat is rolled up with other flavors and stuffing ingredients. I used a 2 pound flank steak and pounded it out to even the thickness, but cutlets work just as well. I made a filling of caramelized onions and garlic, prosciutto, breadcrumbs, Parmesan, egg and fresh herbs and rolled the filling into the steak. Then once the meat is seared, I used the delicious meat drippings to make a fabulous deep red sauce. It was pure heaven. The meat slowly braised in the sauce and was the perfect accompaniment to a good glass of wine.
Prosciutto Stuffed Beef Braciole
- Author: Samantha Ferraro
- Total Time: 1 hour 50 minutes
- Yield: 6 -8 servings 1x
Description
Flank steak loaded with caramelized onions, herbs, prosciutto, and parmesan cheese is slowly braised with a rich red wine sauce.
Ingredients
- 2 lb flank steak
- 1/4 onion (chopped)
- 1 garlic clove (chopped)
- 4 oz Prosciutto (roughly chopped)
- 1 egg
- 1/4 cup Parmesan cheese (grated)
- 1/2–1/4 cup Breadcrumbs
- Small bunch of fresh basil (chopped)
- Small bunch of parsley (chopped)
- Salt and pepper (to taste)
Sauce
- 2 32 oz cans of crushed tomatoes
- 2 garlic cloves (chopped)
- 1/2 onion (chopped)
- 1 Tb tomato paste
- 1 cup Gallo Merlot
- 1 Tb dried oregano
- 1 tsp red pepper flakes
- Olive oil (for drizzling)
- Salt and pepper (to taste)
- Fresh parsley and basil (chopped for garnish)
Additional tools
- Butcher string
Instructions
- First caramelize onions and garlic in olive oil. When done, add to a bowl.
- Then, make the filling by combining onions and garlic, the prosciutto, egg, breadcrumbs, fresh herbs and Parmesan. Mix together and set aside.
- Remove flank steak from package and lay between 2 pieces of plastic wrap. Use a meat mallet (or anything hard) and pound the flank so the width is even.
- Remove the plastic wrap and place the filling evenly on the steak.
- The begin to roll the steak, making sure the filling is tight inside. Once rolled, use butcher string to tie the steak in several places so that it is as even in shape as it can be. Season with salt and pepper.
- In a large dutch oven or pot, drizzle with olive oil and sear the braciole on all sides. Once seared, remove to a plate.
- To the same pot, add chopped onions, garlic, dried oregano, red pepper flakes and sauté until onions are translucent. Add tomato paste and stir to combine. Then add 1 cup of Gallo Merlot and deglaze while using a wooden spoon to scrape the bottom. The wine should reduce by half and thicken.
- Add crushed tomatoes to the pot and season with salt and pepper. Add the braciole (with any juices that have accumulated) into the tomato sauce and cover the pot, leaving a small opening. Allow the sauce to come to a boil and then reduce to a slow simmer. Allow to cook for about 1 hour to 1 hour and 20 minutes. When done, the meat should slice easily and tender.
- When done, slice meat and serve with pasta and additional sauce. Garnish with fresh parsley and basil.
Notes
This recipe makes a huge pot of sauce and a lot of braciole. Serve with your favorite pasta. It also tastes even more flavorful a day or 2 later.
- Prep Time: 30 min
- Cook Time: 80 min
- Category: Main, Secondi
- Method: Braising
- Cuisine: Italian
Keywords: beef, flank steak, italian, braising, slow cooking, prosciutto
Samantha Ferraro is the food blogger and photographer for The Little Ferraro Kitchen. Samantha comes from a diverse background and is originally from Brooklyn NY, until she turned to the island life and moved to Hawaii. Now Samantha blogs about world cuisine recipes made easy in Southern California with her Italian husband and their dog Hula. When she’s not blogging or making a mess in the kitchen, you can find her traveling the world for recipe inspiration.
Can this be made ahead?
Yes it can! You can either make everything and leave it to marinate in the sauce, then reheat through. Or you can make the meat and filling and cover in fridge until you’re ready to cook it in the sauce.
Do you roll from the long end of the beef or the short end?