Gordon Ramsay cottage pie in a baking dish on a wooden table, golden cheesy mash with dark Guinness beef filling visible where portions have been scooped, a pint of dark beer beside it
Beef Dinners

Gordon Ramsay Cottage Pie

Gordon Ramsay’s cottage pie is beef mince browned and simmered in a full bottle of Guinness with Worcestershire sauce and thyme, topped with a cheesy egg-yolk mash and baked until golden and bubbling. It takes about an hour and feeds six to seven.

This is his recipe from Great British Pub Food, and the Guinness is the whole point. A full 330ml bottle goes in, not a splash, and it reduces into a dark, glossy sauce that tastes nothing like beer and everything like deep, slow-cooked beef. He calls it “a deeply savoury cottage pie” for when “it’s cold and dreary outside.”

The step most people skip is draining the fat. Gordon browns the mince hard, then tips it into a sieve before it goes back in the sauce. If you skip that, the Guinness can’t do its job because the fat sits on top and blocks the flavour from getting into the meat.

Gordon Ramsay Cottage Pie

Recipe by Sophie LaneCourse: DinnerCuisine: BritishDifficulty: Easy
Servings

6-7

servings
Prep time

20

minutes
Cooking time

50

minutes
Calories

540

kcal

Gordon’s cottage pie from Great British Pub Food. Beef mince browned and simmered in a full bottle of Guinness until thick and glossy, topped with egg-yolk and cheese mash, forked and baked golden. Serves 6-7.

Ingredients

  • For the filling:
  • 2 tbsp olive oil

  • 900g lean minced beef

  • Sea salt and black pepper

  • 3 medium onions, finely chopped

  • 2 garlic cloves, finely chopped

  • Few thyme sprigs, leaves only

  • 2 plum tomatoes, chopped

  • 2 tbsp tomato purée

  • 330ml bottle Guinness

  • 5 tbsp Worcestershire sauce

  • 300ml chicken stock

  • For the topping:
  • 1kg Maris Piper or King Edward potatoes, peeled and cubed

  • 50g butter

  • 2 tbsp finely grated Parmesan or Cheddar, plus extra

  • 1 large egg yolk

Directions

  • Brown the mince: Heat olive oil in a large pan over high heat. Season the beef and fry in two or three batches until well browned. Tip into a sieve to drain off the fat.
  • Soften the veg: Add a little oil to the same pan and fry the onions with the garlic and thyme for 8 to 10 minutes until soft and golden. Add the browned mince, chopped tomatoes and tomato purée. Stir for 4 to 5 minutes.
  • Add the Guinness: Pour in the full bottle of Guinness and the Worcestershire sauce. Boil until reduced by half. Add the stock, return to the boil, then simmer 20 to 25 minutes until thick and glossy.
  • Make the mash: Boil the potatoes until tender, drain and dry out briefly in the hot pan. Pass through a ricer or mash smooth. Stir in the butter, cheese and egg yolk. Season.
  • Assemble and bake: Heat the oven to 180C (160C fan, Gas 4). Spoon the mince into a 2-litre pie dish. Top with the mash, rough up the surface with a fork, grate over extra cheese. Bake about 30 minutes until bubbling and golden.

Gordon suggests adding diced carrots to the filling if you want extra colour, or serving glazed baby carrots on the side. Either way works, but keeping them out lets the Guinness sauce stay dark and clean.

FAQs

What’s the difference between cottage pie and shepherd’s pie?

The meat. Cottage pie is always beef, shepherd’s pie is always lamb. Everything else is the same idea: mince in gravy under mash.

Gordon makes both, and his shepherd’s pie uses leeks, red wine and a Cheddar champ topping instead of Guinness and thyme. They taste completely different despite looking the same on the plate.

Why a full bottle of Guinness?

Because a splash does nothing. Gordon uses 330ml, a full bottle, and boils it until reduced by half. That reduction is what turns it from beer into a thick, dark, glossy sauce with no bitterness left.

The alcohol cooks off entirely. What stays is a deep savoury richness you can’t get from stock alone.

Can I use red wine instead of Guinness?

You can, and Gordon uses red wine in his shepherd’s pie, but the flavour is different. Wine gives a sharper, brighter sauce. Guinness gives a darker, rounder, almost malty depth.

If you swap, use the same amount and reduce it the same way. The pie will still be good, it just won’t be his cottage pie.

Why does he use 5 tablespoons of Worcestershire sauce?

That’s way more than most recipes call for, and it’s deliberate. Worcestershire adds umami, the savoury depth that makes the filling taste like it cooked for hours even though it simmered for twenty minutes.

Combined with the Guinness reduction, it’s what makes the sauce dark and glossy rather than thin and pale.

Why does Gordon drain the fat after browning?

Because a greasy sauce can’t absorb the Guinness properly. The fat sits on top and the mince stews in its own grease instead of soaking up the stout.

Tip the browned mince into a sieve after each batch. It takes ten seconds and the difference in the finished pie is obvious.

Can I use venison instead of beef?

Gordon makes a venison shepherd’s pie in his Uncharted series, and the same swap works here. Venison mince is leaner so you don’t need to drain the fat.

The Guinness works even better with game because the stout rounds out the stronger flavour. Cook it the same way, just expect a darker, richer filling.

Does it freeze well?

Yes. Assemble but don’t bake, wrap tightly and freeze for up to a month. Thaw overnight in the fridge, then bake as normal.

Leftovers reheat well too: cover with foil and warm at 160C for about 20 minutes. If you’ve bought extra mince, his spaghetti bolognese uses the same browning method and freezes just as well.

What about adding Branston Pickle?

Gordon uses Branston in one of his shepherd’s pie variations, and the same trick works with beef. Stir a couple of tablespoons into the filling before you top it.

The pickle adds a tangy, spiced edge underneath the Guinness that rounds the whole thing out.

Sophie Lane

AboutSophie Lane

I’m Sophie, a British home cook and fan of Gordon Ramsay. I test his recipes in my kitchen and share simple, step-by-step versions anyone can make at home.