Hungarian Goulash
Submitted by cynqueen
Hungarian goulash braises chuck beef with paprika, caraway seeds, cola, and red wine for a rich, deeply flavored stew. Served traditionally over hot egg noodles.
YIELD
8 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
2 hrsREADY
2 hrsHungarian goulash (gulyas) is the national dish of Hungary, a paprika-driven braise that marries inexpensive beef chuck with onions and warm spices into a deeply colored, intensely flavored stew. This Americanized version sticks close to the traditional flavor profile but adds a clever modern twist: a half cup of cola.
The cola might raise eyebrows, but it earns its keep. The caramelized sugar deepens the braising liquid’s color and adds subtle vanilla-spice notes that play beautifully with the paprika and caraway. Combined with the red wine and tomatoes, you get a brick-red sauce with serious depth that reads as far more complex than the ingredient list suggests.
Caraway seeds are non-negotiable in proper goulash. The half teaspoon adds the slightly licorice, slightly earthy note that defines Hungarian cuisine and distinguishes goulash from other Eastern European beef stews.
Blooming the paprika in the warm fat for one minute is the technique that unlocks its flavor. Raw paprika tastes flat and dusty, but a brief toast in oil or butter transforms it into something fragrant and red-hot in color. Don’t burn it though; paprika scorches in seconds.
The long, low simmer (1½ hours) breaks down the chuck’s connective tissue into spoon-tender beef. Serve over wide egg noodles the way Hungarian grandmothers have for generations.
Pro Tips
- Use Hungarian sweet paprika (the genuine article) rather than generic supermarket paprika; the flavor difference is dramatic.
- Brown the meat in batches; crowding the pan steams instead of sears, and you lose the fond that flavors the sauce.
- Make the day before; goulash is famously better the next day after the flavors have time to meld in the fridge.
- Skim any rendered fat off the surface before serving for a cleaner, less greasy sauce.
Variations
- Add a tablespoon of smoked paprika alongside the sweet paprika for a smoky depth.
- Stir in a dollop of sour cream right before serving for the Czech-style version (technically borscht territory but delicious).
- Use beer (a dark lager) instead of cola for a more savory, less sweet braise.
Ingredients
Directions
Cut the beef into ½ inch cubes, discarding the bone and fat.
In a Dutch oven, melt the butter and add the meat, stirring to brown on all sides.
Remove the meat cubes as they brown.
Sauté the onion and garlic in the drippings until they are soft.
Stir in the paprika, salt and caraway seeds; cook for 1 minute.
Stir in the meat, cola, wine and tomatoes.
Cover tightly and simmer for about 1½ hours or until the meat is fork tender.
In a bowl, blend the flour with a little water to make a smooth paste; stir into goulash.
Serve with hot noodles.
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