Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Dad's Hungarian Goulash

My friends gave me a big jar of Paprika so I made this:

Dad's Hungarian Goulash
Ingredients
2 lb. beef, cubed (The beef can be fairly low quality because it will be slow cooked in moist heat.)
4 med. onion, coarsely chopped
3 Tablespoons paprika (regular paprika will do but hot paprika is more authentically Hungarian)
Salt & pepper to taste
Oil

Instructions
Spread a little oil on the bottom of a heavy stew pot.
Brown the beef on all sides.
Cover the bottom of the pot with the onions.
Put the cubed beef on top of the onions.
Sprinkle on the spices.
Cover and cook on low (If you cook it too hot the meat will harden.).
Stir occasionally. Don't take the lid off very often, all the sauce comes from the onions dissolving.
While the meat is cooking, cook the Spätzle, Knopfli or egg noodles.
When the meat is cooked stir in the noodles and let sit for 5 min, then serve.

Theory of the Dish
The secret is onions 2 cups or more (more is better). The liquid could be supplied by the onions alone in which event the quantity of onions should be large – three or four cups, at least – or by a broth made by simmering beef in water for a few hours. Good Hungarian paprika. 1 - 2 lbs beef floured and browned on all sides. Save the remains from the browning and add in the finely chopped onions and sauté. Add the beef and simmer until the beef is tender, even flaky. Add a teaspoon (or more of vinegar). Serve while still hot with home made Spätzle, or prepared egg noodles

Keeps well and is even better a few days later.

Spätzle
Ingredients
2-3 eggs
2 cups flour
1 tsp salt
water

Instructions
Mix the eggs, flour, and salt in a mixing bowl and add the water to get the right consistency.
Allow the mixed dough to rest for twenty minutes or so before placing in the spätzle machine or slicing them from the spätzle board.
Press through the machine or slice from the board into boiling water and remove the noodles when they float to the surface.
Serve warm with sauce – even with butter and perhaps a bit of parsley or onions.

Theory of the Dish
This is a basic recipe for noodles of all kinds but spätzle is a traditional Swabian dish. For spätzle stir everything together (in a mixer of the mixer is strong enough for the mixing), add water to get the right consistency – so that it will pass through the spätzle machine or slide easily from the spätzle board.

If you make them more dumpling shaped they are called "Knopfli". Spätzle means "little sparrows". Knopfli means "little buttons".

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