There are comfort dishes, and then there’s Swiss steak with gravy — the kind of dinner that fills your kitchen with a slow, savory aroma that makes everyone drift toward the stove asking when it’ll be ready. I’m Emma Delacourt, and this is the recipe I turn to when I want maximum flavor from a budget cut of beef. We’re talking fall-apart round steak braised in a rich, thick tomato and onion gravy that coats every forkful. Under 90 minutes, one pan, deeply satisfying.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
What separates a forgettable Swiss steak from an extraordinary one is the gravy. A thin, watery sauce is a missed opportunity. The goal is a glossy, deeply colored gravy that clings to the beef and carries every aromatic in the pan. I’ve found the key lies in two things: a proper Maillard sear that leaves rich fond in the pan, and the right ratio of tomatoes to broth so the liquid reduces into something substantial during the braise.
This recipe produces a gravy thick enough to pool on mashed potatoes without running. It tastes like it was made by someone who’s been cooking this dish for decades — because the technique behind it absolutely has been.
The Butcher’s Selection
- 2 lbs (900g) beef bottom round steak, cut into 4–5 portions
- ½ cup (65g) all-purpose flour + 1 tsp salt + ½ tsp black pepper (for dredging)
- 2 tbsp vegetable oil
- 1 large yellow onion, halved and thinly sliced
- 3 garlic cloves, minced
- 2 tbsp tomato paste
- 1 can (14.5 oz) diced tomatoes, undrained
- 1½ cups (360ml) beef broth — low sodium preferred
- 1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
- 1 tsp onion powder
- 1 tsp smoked paprika
- ½ tsp dried thyme
- ½ tsp dried oregano
- Salt and black pepper to finish
How to Make Swiss Steak with Gravy
- Pound, season, and dredge
Pound each steak portion to ½ inch with a meat mallet, working both sides. Season with salt and pepper, then coat evenly in seasoned flour. The flour will thicken the gravy as it cooks — use it generously and shake off only the loosest excess.
- Build the sear and the fond
Heat oil in a heavy-bottomed Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Sear steaks 3–4 minutes per side until you achieve a deep, mahogany crust. The browned bits clinging to the pan bottom — the fond — are concentrated Maillard compounds that will dissolve into the gravy and give it an irreplaceable depth. Remove steaks and set aside.
The Science: The flour coating on the steak gelatinizes against the hot pan surface, leaving behind starch-based fond that will dissolve into the liquid during braising and contribute directly to the gravy’s body and gloss. - Caramelize onions and bloom the paste
Reduce heat to medium. Add sliced onions to the same pan — they’ll immediately deglaze some of the fond. Cook 6–8 minutes until softened and golden at the edges. Add garlic and cook 1 minute. Add tomato paste and stir constantly for 2 minutes until it darkens from bright red to a deep rust color. This step is essential for gravy depth.
- Add liquids and braise
Pour in diced tomatoes, beef broth, and Worcestershire. Add smoked paprika, thyme, oregano, and onion powder. Stir to combine, scraping every bit of fond from the pan bottom. Nestle the seared steaks into the liquid, partially submerged. Bring to a gentle simmer, cover, and cook on LOW heat for 60–75 minutes.
Key Tip: The lid should be slightly ajar for the last 20 minutes — this allows some steam to escape and concentrates the gravy without drying out the beef. - Rest and check the gravy consistency
Remove steaks. The gravy should coat the back of a spoon. If it’s too thin, simmer uncovered 10 more minutes. If too thick, add a splash of broth. Internal temperature of the beef will exceed Braised minimum195°F / 90°C — the collagen has fully converted to gelatin at this point.
Pro Cooking Tips
- For a smooth gravy, use an immersion blender on part of the sauce after removing the steaks, then stir to combine
- Add 2 tsp of beef bouillon paste to the liquid for an extra layer of savory depth without oversalting
- If your gravy still looks thin, whisk 1 tbsp cornstarch with 2 tbsp cold water and stir in during the last 5 minutes
- This dish pairs beautifully with a simple liver and onions with gravy for a classic comfort-food spread when feeding a crowd
- A cast iron Dutch oven distributes heat more evenly than stainless during the long braise — worth the investment
Recipe Variations
🥘 Brown Gravy Version
Replace diced tomatoes with 2 cups beef broth and 2 tbsp Worcestershire. Add 1 tbsp browning sauce (Kitchen Bouquet). Skip the tomato paste. The result is a deep, dark brown gravy without tomato acidity.
🍄 Mushroom Gravy
Add 8 oz sliced cremini mushrooms with the onions. Their glutamate compounds amplify the savory depth of the gravy significantly. Add 1 tbsp soy sauce with the liquids for additional umami layering.
⚡ Instant Pot Gravy
Sauté and sear using the pot’s Sauté function. Pressure cook on HIGH 35 minutes + 15-minute natural release. The sealed environment concentrates the gravy more aggressively — it may need thinning with a splash of broth at the end.
🥩 Keto Gravy
Skip flour dredge. Use xanthan gum (¼ tsp) to thicken. Replace tomatoes with 2 tbsp tomato paste + 1½ cups broth. This produces a rich, dark, low-carb gravy suitable for keto mashed cauliflower.
What to Serve With This Dish
- Creamy mashed potatoes — non-negotiable for catching every drop of gravy
- Buttered egg noodles — their slight chew contrasts beautifully with the tender beef
- Steamed white rice for a lighter base
- Roasted carrots and parsnips — their natural sweetness balances the savory gravy
- Crusty dinner rolls for sauce-mopping
Storage & Meal Prep
Store beef submerged in gravy in an airtight container up to 4 days. The gravy protects the meat from drying during storage. Reheat gently over low heat, adding a splash of broth if needed.
Freeze in meal-sized portions with gravy for up to 3 months. The gelatin in the gravy prevents texture degradation. Thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating.
Make double quantities on the weekend. Portion with mashed potatoes in divided containers. Reheats perfectly in a microwave or on the stovetop — the gravy re-emulsifies beautifully.
Nutritional Information
Per serving (approx. 8 oz beef + gravy). Values are estimates.
| Nutrient | Amount | % Daily Value* |
|---|---|---|
| Calories | 430 kcal | 22% |
| Protein | 45 g | 90% |
| Total Fat | 17 g | 22% |
| Saturated Fat | 5.5 g | 28% |
| Carbohydrates | 20 g | 7% |
| Fiber | 2 g | 7% |
| Sodium | 710 mg | 31% |
| Iron | 5.4 mg | 30% |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
FAQs
Cook’s Notes on Swiss Steak Methods
How to make Swiss steak from scratch. Whether you searched for how to make Swiss steak, simple Swiss steak recipe, or easy Swiss steak, this recipe covers the full method: pound the round steak, dredge in seasoned flour, brown in a hot skillet, then braise low and slow in tomato gravy. The flour coating thickens the gravy as it cooks — no roux needed. For a truly simple version, skip the browning step and place the floured steak directly into the braising liquid. The crust will not develop, but the meat will still tenderize fully in the gravy.
That Gravy Deserves a Permanent Spot on Your Table
Save this Swiss steak with gravy recipe to Pinterest and bring it back every time comfort food season rolls around.
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