Recipe Review: Grilled Fillet Steak with the Creamiest White Beans and Leeks
A review of the recipe from my pretend boyfriend, Jamie Oliverโs Cookbook; Grilled Fillet Steak with the Creamiest White Beans and Leeks.

Howโs my pretend boyfriend, Jamie Oliver you ask? Wellโฆ heโs super-hot of course, cool and funny. Weโve been jetting here and there all over the world, interviews, cooking demos, saving kids from crappy school lunches, etc. The media keeps wanting to interview me but I just keep telling them NO! โ I just canโt possibly stomach the paparazzi. They make up lies! They fabricate stories! They spread un-truths!
**blink** **blink**
(silence)
Not like me at all.
Siiiiiiiiiiiiiigh ok ok ok.
So Jamie Oliver is only my boyfriend and I havenโt been jetting all around the world ok?? Iโve been at home, enjoying the quality half hour of tv time we spend together. Well, maybe not TOGETHER, togetherโฆ and maybe itโs just me WISHING Jamie was my boyfriend. Canโt blame a girl, can ya? I mean, look at him! โNuff said.
But guess what? My REAL boyfriend, being all sweet and understanding, fulfilled my wishes and bought me a couple of Jamieโs cookbooks. (For no reason I should add!!) Can I just say I was thrilled???
This is one of the books:

I looked over, fantasized, and drooled over the book cover those recipes, trying to decide which one Iโd attempt first. Because I couldnโt really decide, I resorted to the โopen the book to a random page and make what you seeโโฆ method.
Aaaaaaand the recipe was THIS:
Grilled Fillet Steak with the Creamiest White Beans and Leeks

******SNIFF******
I was a little let down by the โRecipe Choosing Godsโ because truth be toldโฆ Iโm not a fan of lima beans. Theyโre โokโ, but really, they rank pretty low on my favorites list. So I thoughtโฆ “choose me this recipe it did, so cook Grilled Fillet Steak with the Creamiest White Beans and Leeks I must.” (Like that resolve?? lol)
Here we go!
So you slice up 4 leeks, nice and thin. My question that the recipe didnโt answer was HOW MUCH of the leek did I cut? The whole white and green part? Because I have to sayโฆ the upper portion of the green parts on those leeks were like barn boards. TOUGH!!! I was going to call my brother who is a chef and ask him as he would most likely know. However, I thought I should follow the recipe as it states, and figure this out on my own. That way any mistakes I make, I can report to you โ my illustrious, amazing readers โ and youโd just think Iโm amazing for saving you from making the same mistakes! Iโm so cool sometimes, itโs hard for me to stand it.

I made the executive decision not to slice the woody ends and slice ONLY to the portion where it started to go thick and tough. When youโre done chopping, sweat them in a pan with garlic and a โknobโ (โKnobโ. Funny word for a measurement. โknobโ is probably a tablespoon or something โ Iโm guessing. Who knows? I wouldnโt mistake it for a stick of butter or anythingโฆโฆโฆโฆโฆ…..โฆโฆ orrrr would I ????? ).
Anyway, after theyโre nice and soft, add a cup of white wine (any that you like to drink is fine.). Leave enough wine for you to enjoy after with the meal. Be it a glass, or you know, the whole bottle.
Heyโฆ Iโm not going to judge.
Turn the heat up and bring this to a boil. At this point, the lima beans can join the party. Please be sure to rinse them from the can because you donโt want any mushy grossness from the bottom of the can being a party crasher.

Add them to pot with a โsplashโ of water (I added about a 1/3 cup of water). Turn the heat to simmer and let it do its thing for about 5 โ 10 minutes.
In the meantimeโฆโฆ.
Season your steaks. I used just top sirloin cuts. Nothing fancy. Drip a bit oโ oil in the pan and when it gets super hot, place the steaks down (away from you) and fry those lovelies on both sides for a 2-3 minutes a piece, or to your pinkish preference. Just make sure you donโt want to over cook them. Chewing shoe leather like a Neanderthal is no fun. Take them out and let them rest.
Back to your beans, add the yogurt and give it a stir. The recipe says to add a glug of olive oil but I left it out, as I didnโt think it was needed really, but thatโs my thing. If you want to, go ahead and glug away!
When the steaks are rested, slice them into thick strips. Divide the bean mixture between the plates and add the steak strips on top. Hereโs my final masterpiece:

My review? Considering Iโm not crazy about recipes with beans and leeks, this was quite good. The leeks were sweet and tender, and the beans were nice and soft and creamy like he said they’d be. Surprisingly, they really showed off the flavor of the wine. Combined with the PERFECTLY cooked steak (If I say so myself!), I thought overall, the dish was quite nice. Easy to make and VERY filling.
Did it blow me away? No. Would I make it again? Maybe – and only if I knew the people I was making it for liked leeks and lima beans. If you met crazy and wonderful people like that, make this for them!
Youโll be a rock star ๐
If you decide to try the dish, please let me know what you think of my boyfriendโs recipe.
Ok, okโฆ my PRETEND boyfriend!
Donโt judge.
Just go make the recipe. ๐
Buy Jamie Oliver’s COOKBOOKย or head right on over to his recipe for Grilled Fillet Steak with the Creamiest White Beans and Leeks here. There’s a link to purchase his book there if you wish. It’s a great book with some really fantastic recipes in it!



