Prague Roast Beef: Bringing a 1986 Czech Classic Back to Life
A colourful Czech-style stuffed roast beef adapted for modern cooking. Slow-cooked, tender, and packed with comforting flavours from Prague.
Servings
Prep Time
Cook Time
Ingredients
Total Time
Ingredients
Meat & Base
- 750 g beef round (a compact piece, thin ends trimmed)
- Salt, black pepper
- 1–2 tbsp oil for searing
- 2 medium onions, sliced
- 2 garlic cloves, chopped
- 1 cup (≈250 ml) seasoned beef stock
- 1 bay leaf
Filling – Colourful Omelette
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- ½ cup ham, finely diced
- ½ cup peas (thawed or drained)
- ½ cup red & green bell pepper, finely diced
- 2 eggs, beaten
- 1 small cube of butter
- Salt, pepper
For the Brown Gravy
- 1½–2 tbsp flour
- Optional: 1 small cube butter at the end
Equipment
Instructions
It's time to take another old recipe and adapt it to our modern needs and ways of cooking. This time, I chose a dish from the Czech Republic. The original name is PRAŽSKÁ HOVĚZÍ PEČENĚ (Prague Roast Beef) and I discovered it in the cookbook Receptury teplých pokrmů by F. Syrový and A. Nestával. The edition I worked with was printed in 1986.
As always, when I explore old recipes, my goal was to stay as close to the original as possible while adapting it just enough to make sense for a modern home kitchen. And if anything was lost in translation or technique, I apologise in advance. But what I can guarantee is that the final result is absolutely delicious.
Before we dive into the updated version, I will leave the original recipe at the end of this article so you can try it exactly as it was written before exploring my adaptation.
Roast Beef Instructions (Modern Version)
- Make the filling: Heat the olive oil. Sauté the ham for 1–2 minutes, then add peas and peppers. Cook 2–3 minutes until slightly softened. Pour in the beaten eggs, season, add the butter, and cook gently until softly set. Let cool.
- Cut the pocket & fill the beef: Season the beef all over.
- Cut a long pocket in the beef (leaving 1–1.5 cm walls).

- Add the cooled omelette.

- Tie & season: Tie the beef tightly every 3–4 cm.

- Sear the meat: Sear on all sides except the cut side.

- Transfer to the slow cooker.
- Build the base: Sauté the onions and garlic in the same pan.

- Deglaze with beef stock, scraping the browned bits. Pour into the slow cooker and add the bay leaf.

- Slow cook: Cook on HIGH 6 hours.

- Rest & make the gravy: Rest the meat for 15–20 minutes. Using an immersion blender, combine the onion and the remaining liquid, then strain it in a small pot.

- Heat the liquid, stir in the flour until golden, then constantly stir until there are no pockets of flour left.
- Simmer 10–15 minutes until glossy. Add butter and stir until it melts.

- Add a bit of water if it's too thick.
- Slice & serve: Remove the twine. Slice against the grain to reveal the colourful filling.

- Serve with gravy.
Original Recipe (Translated and Preserved)
Servings: 10
One portion: 193 g total, including 73 g meat and filling. The slice shows a bright filling of eggs, peas, and ham/salami, topped with brown gravy.
Method (Original)
Rinse an elongated piece of beef and cut a pocket. Fill with eggs, salami or ham, and peas. Close with a skewer. Season with salt and pepper.
Slice the onions and sauté in lard until golden. Sear the stuffed meat on this base. Add water and roast/braise until tender, turning and basting as needed.
Remove the meat. Reduce the cooking juices to fat, dust with flour, brown lightly, add lukewarm water, and cook for at least 1 hour. Strain and adjust seasoning.
Filling (Original)
Fry Prague salami/ham in lard, add peas, pour in beaten eggs, and let them thicken.
Ingredients (Original – for 10 portions)
- Beef (hindquarter), trimmed for cooking — 1000 g
- Prague salami (bologna-type) — 50 g
- Green peas, drained — 50 g
- Eggs (2 pcs) — 80 g
- Rendered lard — 120 g
- Salt — 30 g
- Ground pepper — 1 g
- Onion — 200 g
- Drinking water — 1200 g (≈1200 ml)
- All-purpose flour — 100 g
Differences Between the Two Versions — What I Modernized and Why
Working with this recipe felt a bit like stepping into an old Czech kitchen, and my goal from the beginning was to protect that spirit as much as possible.
Still, once you move a recipe from a 1986 professional manual into a modern home setting, a few adjustments naturally emerge.
The first and most significant change was the cooking method. The original version was designed for restaurant and canteen kitchens, where large pieces of meat simmered in huge pots and were tended to throughout the day.
At home, cooking in such volume and with that level of hands-on attention is simply not practical. The slow cooker became an ideal solution — it preserves the gentle, slow cooking the recipe depends on, while allowing the meat to become tender without constant supervision.
Nothing essential is lost, but the process becomes far more accessible.
The second change was the use of fat. Lard played a central role in mid-century Czech cooking, especially in professional environments.
I chose to use oil with a touch of butter instead. This doesn't alter the essence of the dish, but it brings it closer to how most of us cook today, without the heaviness that large amounts of lard can bring.
The filling is where I stayed the closest to the original. Eggs, peas, and ham form the heart of this roast.
My only addition was red and green bell pepper — not to change the flavour profile, but simply to add colour and a bit of brightness to the cross-section once sliced. It brings the dish visually into the present without taking it away from its roots.
Finally, I scaled the quantities down. The original recipe yields ten large portions, ideal for institutional kitchens. My updated version is tailored to a household, but the structure and the soul of the recipe remain intact.
Historical Notes & Background
PRAŽSKÁ HOVĚZÍ PEČENĚ belongs to a fascinating category of Central European stuffed roasts that were especially popular throughout the 20th century.
These dishes were developed to transform modest cuts of beef into festive, visually striking centrepieces.
The colourful fillings — typically eggs, peas, and some type of cured meat — made the roast look generous and celebratory even when the ingredients were humble.
Stuffed roasts with eggs and peas appear in Czech cookbooks as far back as the early 1900s. The introduction of Prague salami (a mild Czech bologna) reflects the post-war and socialist-era push toward standardised, widely available ingredients. This made the recipe easy to replicate in schools, factories, and restaurant kitchens.
The cookbook Receptury teplých pokrmů played a major role in shaping food culture in Czechoslovakia. It served as a reference for chefs and institutions, ensuring that classic dishes tasted the same across the country. Many recipes in it reflect a blend of tradition, practicality, and the culinary norms of the late 20th century.
This particular roast stands out for its striking appearance: once sliced, the colourful centre creates a beautiful mosaic. Visual appeal mattered even then — well before the era of social media.
FAQ
Before cooking this dish, here are a few helpful answers:
Q: Can I cook this without a slow cooker?
A: Yes. Braise in a Dutch oven at 160°C for 2½–3½ hours, turning occasionally.
Q: Can I change the filling?
A: Yes, but the original character of the dish comes from eggs, peas, and ham. Carrots, spinach, or mushrooms work well as additions.
Q: What cut of beef should I use?
A: A lean, elongated cut, like round or top rump, works best for cutting a pocket and slicing neatly.
Q: How do I keep the filling intact?
A: Tie the roast tightly every 3–4 cm and cook the omelette until softly set.
Q: What's the best way to reheat leftovers?
A: Slice first, then reheat gently in gravy to keep everything moist.
Conclusion
This Prague Roast Beef aka PRAŽSKÁ HOVĚZÍ PEČENĚ is a beautiful example of how an old recipe can be honoured while still fitting comfortably into a modern kitchen.
It keeps the charm and flavour of the Czech original while becoming easier to prepare and serve.
The full video for this recipe is available below and on our YouTube channel — so don't forget to like and subscribe for more delicious food stories and modern takes on historical dishes.


