Slow-Braised Greek Stifado, House Style

Slow-Braised Greek Stifado, House Style

Thereโ€™s something quietly theatrical about a pot of stifado bubbling away in the kitchenโ€”the windows gently misting, the scent of cinnamon, red wine, and slow-cooked beef drifting from room to room, drawing everyone a little closer to the table. This is the kind of cooking that asks nothing from you but a little patienceโ€ฆ and rewards you handsomely for it.

Inspired by the sun-drenched kitchens of Greece, this deeply comforting beef stifado brings together meltingly tender beef, sweet shallots, ripe tomatoes, warming spices, and a slow, luxurious simmer that transforms humble ingredients into something truly memorable. Itโ€™s rich, fragrant, unapologetically heartyโ€”and exactly the sort of dish made for long evenings, second helpings, and bread torn straight from the loaf to catch every last spoonful of sauce.

This isnโ€™t just dinnerโ€”itโ€™s the kind of meal that lingers long after the plates are cleared. So pour yourself something lovely, turn the heat low, and let the kitchen work its magic. Tonight, weโ€™re cooking stifadoโ€ฆ and trust me, your home is about to smell extraordinary.

Why Youโ€™ll Fall Hard for Greek Beef Stifado

Big, Slow-Cooked Comfort
This is the sort of dish that turns an ordinary evening into something worth lingering over. Rich, warming, and deeply satisfying, itโ€™s made for chilly nights, long conversations, and tables that stay full a little longer.

Layer Upon Layer of Flavor
Tender beef, meltingly sweet shallots, ripe tomatoes, red wine, and warming spices create a sauce thatโ€™s bold, fragrant, and completely spoon-worthy. Every bite feels a little more indulgent than the last.

Effortless, Yet Impressive
The beauty of stifado lies in its simplicityโ€”just a little prep, a low flame, and time doing what time does best. The result? Something that tastes as though youโ€™ve been cooking all dayโ€ฆ because, technically, you have.

Made for Gathering
Pile it into bowls with warm crusty bread, spoon it over fluffy rice, or serve alongside bright lemony potatoes for a feast that feels straight from a taverna in Greece.

Even Better Tomorrow
If you somehow have leftovers, youโ€™re in luck. Like many slow-cooked classics, stifado deepens overnight, becoming richer, silkier, and arguably even more irresistible the next day.

In other wordsโ€ฆ cook once, eat gloriously twice.

Prepare

15 mins

Cook

2 hrs

Serving

6 servings

Ingredients Youโ€™ll Need

Before the slow simmer begins, gather the ingredients that give this classic from Greece its unmistakable depth, warmth, and soul.

Beef Chuck
Beautifully marbled and perfect for slow cooking, chuck transforms into meltingly tender bites after a long, gentle simmer. Brisket works beautifully too if youโ€™re after an even richer finish.

Extra Virgin Olive Oil
A generous splash of good olive oil lays the foundationโ€”helping the beef caramelise while adding that unmistakably Mediterranean richness.

Shallots
Sweet, delicate, and wonderfully silky once cooked, shallots are one of stifadoโ€™s signature ingredients. If needed, small yellow onions make a perfectly worthy stand-in.

Garlic
A few fresh cloves bring warmth, depth, and that irresistible savoury backbone every slow-cooked stew deserves.

Red Wine
For deglazing, deepening, and building layers of flavour. Choose something youโ€™d happily pour into a glass. Prefer alcohol-free? A rich beef stock works beautifully.

Cinnamon Sticks
This is where the magic beginsโ€”bringing a gentle warmth and subtle sweetness that makes stifado instantly recognisable.

Whole Cloves
Bold, aromatic, and wonderfully old-world, cloves add that unmistakable Greek taverna character.

Allspice Berries
Earthy, warm, and quietly complexโ€”small but mighty in creating that signature spiced depth.

Bay Leaves
A quiet background note that slowly infuses the sauce with herbal warmth as everything bubbles away.

Tomato Passata
Silky, rich, and naturally sweet, passata creates the luxurious base that wraps around every piece of beef.

Water or Stock
Just enough to let everything simmer low and slow, coaxing every ounce of flavour from the pot.

Sea Salt & Freshly Cracked Black Pepper
Simple, essential, and absolutely transformative when layered in properly.

Fresh Flat-Leaf Parsley
A final flourish of colour and freshness just before servingโ€”optional, but highly recommended.

With everything prepped and ready, all thatโ€™s left is a little patienceโ€ฆ and the promise of a kitchen thatโ€™s about to smell absolutely incredible.

Method

1. Build the Foundation

Place a large Dutch ovenโ€”or heavy-based casseroleโ€”over a medium-high heat and add a generous drizzle of extra virgin olive oil. Once shimmering, add the beef in batches, allowing each piece to develop a deep, golden crust on every side. Donโ€™t rush this partโ€”those caramelised edges are where the real flavour lives.

Transfer the browned beef to a plate and set aside while you work on the next layer.

2. Sweeten the Pot

Lower the heat slightly and add the shallots to the same pot, letting them soften slowly in all those rich, beefy juices until glossy and translucent. Stir in the garlic and cook for another minute, just until fragrant and irresistible.

At this point, your kitchen should already smell extraordinary.

3. Pour, Scrape, and Awaken the Flavour

Pour in the red wine with confidenceโ€”itโ€™ll hiss, bubble, and lift every last bit of flavour from the bottom of the pot. Use a wooden spoon to scrape up those deeply browned pieces, then allow the wine to reduce for a few minutes until slightly syrupy.

Stir through the tomato passata, followed by the cinnamon sticks, cloves, allspice, and bay leaves. Suddenly, it starts smelling less like dinnerโ€ฆ and more like something happening.

4. Let Time Do the Heavy Lifting

Return the beefโ€”along with any resting juicesโ€”back into the pot. Add enough stock or water to just cover, then bring everything to a gentle simmer.

Partially cover, lower the heat, and let it quietly bubble away for 1ยฝโ€“2 hours, stirring occasionally, until the beef is fork-tender and the sauce has thickened into something rich, glossy, and deeply comforting.

This is the moment where patience becomes flavour.

5. Finish Like You Mean It

Taste, season generously with sea salt and freshly cracked black pepper, and adjust the consistency with a splash of stock if needed.

Scatter over freshly chopped parsley, bring the pot straight to the table, and serve while still gently steaming.

Because Greek Beef Stifado isnโ€™t just dinnerโ€”itโ€™s the kind of meal that makes people stay a little longer.

Make Ahead, Variations & A Few Delicious Twists

Make Ahead

Like many of the best slow-cooked dishes from Greece, stifado only gets better with time. In fact, if you can make it a day ahead, Iโ€™d highly recommend it. An overnight rest allows the wine, tomatoes, and warming spices to settle, deepen, and weave themselves into something even richer by the next day.

You can prepare it in stages if youโ€™re cooking around a busy week:

  • Up to 24 hours ahead โ€” Brown the beef, soften the shallots, and build your flavour base, then cover and refrigerate.

  • Fully cook ahead โ€” Let the stew cool completely, then store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days.

  • Freezer friendly โ€” Portion into freezer-safe containers and freeze for up to 3 months.

To reheat, warm gently over a low heat, adding a splash of stock or water if the sauce has thickened too much. Like all great stews, it comes back beautifully.

Variations & Substitutions

One of the joys of stifado is how forgivingโ€”and wonderfully adaptableโ€”it can be.

Make It Even Heartier

Add chunks of carrots, baby potatoes, or roasted root vegetables during the final hour of cooking. Theyโ€™ll drink up every bit of that rich sauce.

Swap the Beef

For a more traditional taverna-style twist, try lamb shoulder instead of beefโ€”it becomes beautifully tender and pairs effortlessly with the warming spices.

Turn Up the Herbs

A few sprigs of fresh thyme or oregano bring a lovely Mediterranean lift and an extra layer of fragrance.

Add a Gentle Heat

A pinch of chilli flakes adds just enough warmth to wake everything up without overpowering the dish.

Go More Rustic

Swap silky passata for crushed tomatoes if you prefer a chunkier, farmhouse-style sauce.

Deepen the Spice

A pinch of saffron or a little freshly grated nutmeg brings an entirely new dimensionโ€”warm, aromatic, and quietly luxurious.

A Plant-Based Take

Replace the beef with chestnut mushrooms, lentils, or even butter beans for a deeply comforting meat-free version that still feels wonderfully substantial.

Try It with Chicken

Using chicken thighs creates a lighter but equally comforting spinโ€”less traditional, perhapsโ€ฆ but no less delicious.

Serve it with fluffy lemon rice, buttery mashed potatoes, or simply plenty of warm bread for mopping up every last spoonfulโ€”because leaving sauce behind should never be an option.

What to Serve with Greek Beef Stifado

A pot of stifado deserves companyโ€”dishes that soak, scoop, refresh, and turn an already comforting supper into something that feels wonderfully complete.

Greek Lemon Rice

Bright, fragrant, and gently citrusy, lemon rice cuts beautifully through the richness of the slow-braised beef, bringing balance to every spoonful.

Greek Salad

Cool cucumber, ripe tomatoes, briny olives, creamy feta, and a splash of olive oilโ€ฆ simple, fresh, and exactly the kind of contrast a rich stew loves.

Warm Crusty Bread

Perhaps the most important companion of all. Thick slices of warm bread are practically mandatory for mopping up that deeply spiced tomato sauce.

Roasted Mediterranean Vegetables

Caramelised carrots, potatoes, peppers, or aubergine bring sweetness, colour, and another layer of comforting rustic flavour.

Buttered Pasta or Orzo

A slightly unexpected choiceโ€”but a brilliant one. The pasta drinks in every drop of sauce, turning stifado into something wonderfully indulgent.

Cool Tzatziki

Refreshing, garlicky, and creamy, Tzatziki adds a cooling lift that works beautifully alongside the warming spices.

A Glass of Red Wine

If you cooked with red wine, pour a glass alongside. It ties everything together and makes the whole meal feel just that little bit more special.

Something Sweet to Finish

A square of honey-soaked Baklava, perhaps, or a simple bowl of Greek yoghurt with walnuts and a drizzle of honeyโ€”because a feast inspired by Greece deserves a proper ending.

A Few Stifado Secrets

Take Your Time with the Browning
Colour equals flavour here. Let the beef develop a deep, caramelised crust before turningโ€”dark golden edges mean richer sauce, deeper character, and a far more memorable pot of stifado. If the pan feels crowded, work in batches. Itโ€™s worth it.

Low, Slowโ€ฆ and Then a Little Slower
Stifado isnโ€™t a dish to rush. A gentle simmer for 1ยฝ to 2 hours gives the beef time to relax, soften, and become beautifully spoon-tender. Push the heat too high, and youโ€™ll miss that melt-in-the-mouth finish.

Watch the Pot, Not the Clock
Every pot behaves a little differently. If the sauce starts reducing too quickly, add a splash of stock or hot water to keep everything glossy, rich, and beautifully spoonable.

Season in Layers
A little salt early on builds depth, but the final seasoning matters most. Taste as you go, then adjust right at the endโ€”sometimes one final pinch is all it takes to make every flavour suddenly sing.

Let the Spices Work Quietly
Cinnamon, cloves, and allspice should whisper, not shout. The goal is warmth, depth, and intrigueโ€”not Christmas pudding.

Finish with Freshness
A scattering of freshly chopped parsley just before serving brings colour, brightness, and a clean lift that cuts beautifully through the richness.

And if you can waitโ€ฆ wait.
Like so many classics from Greece, stifado is somehow even better the next dayโ€”richer, deeper, and arguably impossible to resist.

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Elle Cresswell

Slow-Braised Greek Stifado, House Style

Bring the warmth of Greece to your table with this rich, slow-simmered beef stifadoโ€”a deeply comforting, soul-soothing stew made for generous spoonfuls, second helpings, and sharing with the people you love.

Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 2 hours
Total Time 2 hours 15 minutes
Servings: 6 servings
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: greek
Calories: 350

Ingredients

  

  • 900 g beef chuck steak cut into generous chunks *(brisket works beautifully too)
  • 2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil for browning and building flavour)
  • 200 g shallots peeled *(small onions can be used if preferred)
  • 3 garlic cloves finely chopped or crushed
  • 240 ml red wine or rich beef stock for an alcohol-free version
  • 2 cinnamon sticks or 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 5 whole cloves or ยผ tsp ground cloves
  • 1 tsp ground allspice or lightly crushed allspice berries
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 400 g tomato passata or crushed tomatoes for a more rustic finish
  • 480 ml water or beef stock or enough to just cover
  • Sea salt and freshly cracked black pepper** to taste
  • 1 tbsp freshly chopped parsley for serving *(optional, but highly recommended)
  • Simple ingredientsโ€ฆ slow heatโ€ฆ and the unmistakable soul of Greece in every spoonful.

Method

 

  1. Heat a large Dutch oven or heavy-based casserole over a medium-high heat and add the olive oil. Once shimmering, add the beef in batches, allowing each piece to develop a deep, caramelised crust on all sidesโ€”about **4โ€“5 minutes per side**. Donโ€™t overcrowd the pot; colour is flavour here. Transfer the browned beef to a plate and set aside.
  2. In the same pot, lower the heat to medium and add the shallots, letting them soften gently for **3โ€“4 minutes** until glossy and translucent. Stir in the garlic and cook for another minute or two, just until fragrant and beginning to sweeten.
  3. Pour in the red wine, letting it hiss and bubble as it lifts all those rich, caramelised bits from the bottom of the pot. Give it **2โ€“3 minutes** to reduce slightly, then stir through the tomato passata, cinnamon sticks, cloves, and allspice until beautifully combined.
  4. Return the beefโ€”along with any resting juicesโ€”back to the pot, add the bay leaves, and pour in enough water or stock to just cover. Bring everything to a gentle boil, then reduce the heat to low, partially cover, and let it quietly simmer for **1ยฝโ€“2 hours**, stirring occasionally, until the beef is meltingly tender and the sauce is rich, glossy, and deeply aromatic.
  5. Taste, season generously with sea salt and freshly cracked black pepper, and loosen with a splash of stock if needed. Finish with a scattering of fresh parsley, bring the pot straight to the tableโ€ฆ and let this little taste of Greece do the rest.

Notes

Like many slow-cooked classics from Greece, this stifado only gets better with time. As it rests, the wine, tomatoes, and warming spices deepen beautifully, making leftovers arguably even more irresistible the next day. Store covered in the fridge for up to 3 days, or freeze in airtight containers for up to 3 months for an effortless, flavour-packed supper whenever the craving strikes.


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