annuin: (Nub)
Marieke ([personal profile] annuin) wrote2006-12-03 03:13 pm
Entry tags:

Gourmand

So yesterday I made Hungarian goulash for dinner, per this recipe that was posted by [livejournal.com profile] alasharia_la in her LJ a few weeks ago. Can't get more authentic than a recipe that actually comes from someone who is Hungarian.

Super easy, and tasty. We had ours with mashed potato. And there was enough that I could freeze two batches for dinner another time, always a bonus.

Tonight we'll have "Chickpeas Cooked in Tea" with "Delicious Chicken Bits" per my Madhur Jaffrey cookbook. The second recipe will be a new one for me to try, the first is already a favourite of mine.

And depending on how much other stuff I get done this afternoon, and if I have time, I might bake some pumpkin cookies. Mmmm...

The microwave just dinged to let me know that the milk is warm for our café au lait with the chicory coffee from Café du Monde in New Orleans. Delish!

[identity profile] tanthe.livejournal.com 2006-12-04 12:18 am (UTC)(link)
I'd never made goulash myself. I think many non-traditional recipes go the flour/tomato route. I like how the more traditional one is also just way easier. The hardest part about it is getting all the onions sliced and diced without tearing up too much, lol.

[identity profile] alasharia-la.livejournal.com 2006-12-04 01:05 am (UTC)(link)
try refrigerating the onions for a day or two before. for some reason, that works really well for me

[identity profile] erg.livejournal.com 2006-12-04 04:26 am (UTC)(link)
There are cutting boards made to fit across a sink, w/ a hole, filled with a wire mesh basket: These are good, if you're careful, for cutting the onions under running water, which stops 'em from stinging the eyes. If possible, use a slicer rather than a simple blade, so there's no risk.

[identity profile] tanthe.livejournal.com 2006-12-05 12:35 am (UTC)(link)
They came from the fridge.

I did chop them in my (regular sized) food-processor/chopper, which I will say does a more lousy job than my mini food-processor (because it doesn't chop everything evenly, and some of the larger pieces didn't get chopped, whereas the earlier inserted stuff is almost pureed, though with the sauce it didn't matter much, my mini f-p chops much more evenly. By and large though it's barely worth using the large f-p, because the clean up is a big hassle).