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This Is the Best Dinner Recipe I Made in 2024 (It Will Never Leave My Weeknight Rotation)

Lauren Miyashiro
Lauren MiyashiroExecutive Editor
I've been in digital food media for 13+ years, although I’ve also dabbled in magazines and cookbooks. I was previously at Food Network and Delish (where I once made a 10-pound bagel ... YouTube it!). My focus started in recipes, but now I obsess over everything possibly related to home cooking.
published Dec 14, 2024
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Angled view of beef tips on mashed potatoes, topped with herbs in a white and brown speckled bowl.
Credit: Photo: Alex Lepe ; Food Stylist: James Park

I think I’ve cooked somewhere around 240 dinners this year. And I’m not ashamed to admit that many, if not most, nights I’m extremely lazy. The less shopping, chopping, waiting, and dishwashing I need to do, the better. If you are also a fan of delightfully quick and easy recipes, I swear by these:

During winter, though, I’m willing to up the cooking time required to optimize on cozy. Enter: braising, my favorite way to prepare dinner when it’s cold out. If you need a refresher on what the heck braising even is, it’s simply searing something (often meat) quickly over high heat then gently simmering it in liquid. The results are juicy, and fall-apart tender. It takes a while, but (and this is a big but!), it’s usually really hands-off and easy. 

I love our chicken tinga recipe for these reasons, and French onion pot roast is still on my to-do list. But my current fave is beef tips and gravy. 

Get the recipe: Beef Tips and Gravy

Credit: Photo: Alex Lepe ; Food Stylist: James Park

What’s So Amazing About Beef Tips and Gravy

First things first, you don’t need to buy “beef tips.” That term generally refers to sirloin tips (aka “bavette” or “flap meat”) but can be hard to find. And if you get a roast that’s similarly named, you might end up with tough results. Instead, use boneless beef chuck, a budget-friendly option that’s readily available and will yield the meatiest, “meltingly tender” results. 

The meat simmers in a brown gravy that packs a punch of flavor from soy sauce, Worcestershire sauce, and dried thyme. It’s smooth, verging on kinda creamy (without a drop of dairy) but not too rich. I eat it straight from the Dutch oven with a spoon and basically crave it once a week. 

I love braised beef tips most over mashed potatoes, but more often I’m serving it over egg noodles. I imagine it’s also top-notch alongside polenta or roasted potatoes

What’s your favorite cozy winter dinner? Let me know in the comments below!

Get the recipe: Beef Tips and Gravy