This old favourite is great whatever time of the year.
Here's my latest thought, “zhuzhed” a little. These days goulash seems to be served with rice or, spatzle (a soft egg noodle). I'm an old fashioned kinda gal with certain dishes and goulash is one of them. I like to serve mine, as was done in the 70s, with new potatoes. The ultimate comfort food however you want to serve it – by the way don't forget the sour cream - stirring in or even a blob on top – optional of course.
Hungarian Goulash
Serves 4-6 depending on size of appetite
900g braising steak, diced
glug of rapeseed oil to seal the beef
1 large onion, chopped as finely as possible
*8 tbsp tomato ketchup
*2 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
*1 tbsp soft dark brown sugar
*2 tsps salt
*2 tsps Hungarian sweet paprika
*½ tsp mustard powder
300ml water
2 beef stock pots
1 tbsp cornflour mixed with 1 tbsp water
small tub of sour cream - optional
Use a large frying pan and seal the steak in the rapeseed oil – in small batches – if you overfill the pan you will finish up with grey steak and it will “stew” - not nice! Set the batches aside in the slow cooker. Soften the onion for 2 minutes and then add to the steak.
In a medium sized bowl mix together the ingredients marked *.
Using the same frying pan – and therefore any residual juices, add the water and the stock pots, bring to the boil and stir until the pots have melted. Add the mixed ingredients * and pour over the beef.
Cover and cook on low for 8 hours or until meat is tender.
At the end of the cooking time, using a slotted spoon, remove the steak from the gravy. Mix the cornflour with water and stir into goulash and cook on high to thicken.
Add the steak back into the thickened gravy and you're good to go.
Or forget the new potatoes and serve it with either of the bread recipes – in a bowl with bread to dunk.
Perfect!
No comments:
Post a Comment