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TEST: Venison steak, cheese and chips baguette toastie

Tim Maddams shares a wild venison steak, cheese and chips baguette toastie — a French-inspired recipe for an indulgent lunch or casual supper.

Venison steak, cheese and chips baguette toastie a la Francaise
Lee Stirk
Lee Stirk 1 June 2026

There is a particular kind of food that only makes sense after a long day in the field, or a longer evening in good company. Tim Maddams found his version of it in France, where the late-night baguette stuffed with rare beef, melted cheese, chips and a punchy sauce is something close to an institution. This is his wild venison take on it.

In France, the post-pub snack is taken seriously. One that stuck with me was a toasted baguette packed with rare beef, cheese, chips and a sauce called sauce Americaine. It is not refined, but it is very good indeed.

This version swaps the beef for wild venison. Rather than mincing the meat, I cook a whole roe deer backstrap like a steak, rest it, then slice it thin and layer it into the bread. The result is hearty, messy and exactly the sort of thing you want to eat with your hands. It is a fitting way to make the most of your quarry.

  • Prep time: 10 minutes
  • Cook time: 15 minutes
  • Total time: 25 minutes
  • Serves: 2
  • Difficulty: Easy

Ingredients

For the baguette

  • 400g fully trimmed roe loin, at room temperature
  • A few fresh thyme leaves
  • Salt and pepper
  • Olive oil
  • 100g chips (fried or oven-baked before adding to the sandwich)
  • 100g of your preferred melting cheese (smoked cheddar works brilliantly)
  • 1 short baguette

For the sauce Americaine

  • 50g mayonnaise
  • 20g ketchup
  • 10g American mustard
  • 1 tsp chopped capers
  • Dash of Tabasco
  • Dash of Henderson's Relish (or Worcestershire sauce)
  • Pinch of smoked paprika
  • 1 tsp chopped tarragon
  • Optional: finely chopped garlic or anchovy for extra depth of flavour

How to make a venison steak toastie – step by step

  • Step 1. Make the sauce. Mix all the sauce ingredients together in a small bowl and adjust the seasoning to taste. Set aside.
  • Step 2. Prep the chips and pan. If frying the chips, heat the oil now. If baking, preheat your oven. Get a grill pan or frying pan hot for the venison.
  • Step 3. Cook the venison steak. Lightly oil and season the loin with thyme, salt and pepper. Sear for about three minutes per side, then a minute on each edge for an even char. Transfer to a warm plate and rest for five minutes.
  • Step 4. Finish the chips and cheese. Cook or remove the chips from the oven, drain on kitchen paper and salt lightly. Grate the cheese while the venison rests, then slice the rested loin into thin strips.
  • Step 5. Build and toast. Reduce the pan heat slightly. Slice the baguette and layer with cheese, venison, chips and sauce. Add the baguette lid and grill for two minutes per side until golden and the cheese has melted. Slice in half and serve immediately with extra sauce, salad or pickles.

Tips for the best venison toastie

Rest the venison well before slicing. This keeps the juices in the meat rather than in the bread, which is what stops the baguette going soggy. A roe backstrap is lean, so do not be tempted to cook it beyond medium-rare; treat it as you would a good steak.

Serving suggestion

This is a relaxed lunch or casual supper rather than a dinner-party dish. A simple green salad cuts through the richness, and a cold beer is the natural partner. Pickles or cornichons on the side are a good idea if you like a sharper edge.

Frequently Asked Questions

What cut of venison is best for a steak toastie?

A fully trimmed roe loin (backstrap) is ideal. It is tender, lean and cooks quickly like a steak, so it can be seared, rested and sliced thinly to layer into the baguette. Other deer loins work equally well, scaled to the size of the animal.

What is sauce Americaine?

In this recipe it is a quick cold sauce made from mayonnaise, ketchup, American mustard, capers, Tabasco, Henderson's Relish, smoked paprika and tarragon. It is tangy and slightly smoky, and it is mixed together cold rather than cooked. Finely chopped garlic or anchovy can be added for extra depth.

How do you stop the baguette going soggy?

Rest the cooked venison for five minutes before slicing so the juices stay in the meat rather than soaking into the bread. Draining the chips on kitchen paper and toasting the assembled baguette until golden also help keep it crisp.

How should venison loin be cooked for this recipe?

Sear it for about three minutes per side, plus a minute on each edge, then rest for five minutes. Roe loin is very lean, so it is best kept to medium-rare; cooking it further will dry it out.

Can I use a different cheese?

Yes. Any good melting cheese works. Smoked cheddar is recommended here because it pairs well with the venison, but a milder cheddar, Gruyere or raclette would all melt nicely into the toastie.

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