HUNGARIAN CHICKEN PAPRIKASH
My mom learned to make this tender chicken dish when she volunteered to help prepare the dinners served at her church. It's my favorite main dish, and the gravy, seasoned with paprika, sour cream and onions, is the best. -Pamela Eaton, Monclova, Ohio
Provided by Taste of Home
Categories Dinner
Time 1h50m
Yield 6 servings.
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Preheat oven to 350°. In a large skillet, heat butter over medium-high heat. Add onion; cook and stir until tender. Sprinkle chicken with paprika, salt and pepper; place in an ungreased roasting pan. Spoon onion mixture over chicken. Add water. Bake, covered, 1-1/2 hours or until chicken juices run clear., Remove chicken and keep warm. Pour drippings and loosened browned bits from roasting pan into a saucepan. Skim fat. In a small bowl, mix cornstarch and cold water until smooth. Stir into pan juices with onion. Bring to a boil; cook and stir until thickened, 1-2 minutes. Remove from heat. Stir in sour cream. Serve with chicken.
Nutrition Facts :
CLAY POT CREAMY PAPRIKA CHICKEN
If you don't have a clay pot you can easily make this in any oven dish or even on the stove top.
Provided by barbara lentz
Categories Chicken
Time 1h5m
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- 1. Soak for clay pot for 15 minutes in cold water. Drain. Add the onions and garlic to the bottom of the clay pot. Top with the chicken pieces and season with the paprika , salt and pepper. Pour the wine around the chicken. Cover and place in cold oven. Turn oven to 450 degrees. Bake for 45 minutes.
- 2. Turn the oven off. Remove the chicken and set aside. Stir the sour cream into the onion sauce. Return the chicken to the pot and place back in oven for 10 more minutes to get the sauce hot.
- 3. Serve over hot buttered noodles
HUNGARIAN CHICKEN PAPRIKA
This is a recipe for Chicken Paprika, a recipe my father brought over from Hungary. It is simply marvelous. (It bears no relationship to Cacciatore.)
Provided by Sam29839
Categories Whole Chicken
Yield 6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- Sauce procedure: Cut whole chicken into it's constituent parts (breasts, thigh, etc.) and remove skin. Remove skin from thighs. (trim fat deposits and rinse all chicken thoroughly) This step is critical.
- Cut all chicken pieces in half. This exposes the crucial bone marrow. The more marrow you expose, the better the sauce. I chop the wings into 4 or five pieces. Do not add giblets and neck.
- In large pot, combine chicken, salt, Paprika, chicken base, and enough water to just cover the chicken pieces.
- Cook, partially covered, at such temperature that a simmer to very gentle boil is achieved. You want just a bit of bubbling.
- Do so until the chicken is thoroughly cooked and easily removed from the bone--About 1.5 hrs. (I cook the chicken until it is on the verge of falling off the bone. This extracts maximum flavor from the chicken.)
- Strain mixture to separate liquid and chicken. Place chicken into a warm serving dish.
- Return liquid to pot, and vigorously mix in sour cream and milk. I use a whisk for this. Carefully bring the sauce to a boil and remove immediately from heat. Failure to remove promptly will result in very messy boiling over!
- Set burner to it's lowest setting and return pot to the burner to keep sauce hot. The sauce is basically finished at this point. You may wish to fine tune by adding more salt, sour cream, Paprika, and/or chicken base. I sometimes add a 1/2 cup or so of heavy cream for added richness. You may also want to skim most of the liquid fat from the sauce surface.
- Noodles procedure: Combine flour, salt, and eggs in a hemispherical bowl large enough to accommodate mixing.
- Add about 1/2 cup water and proceed to blend ingredients with a fork until well blended. The consistency your striving for is such that the dough is clearly wet, adheres to the bowl, and is loose enough to slowly spread out when a dollop is applied to the cutting board. Add enough water to achieve this. I've never measured how much water I use, but think it's about 1/2 cup plus some. Actually, the consistency is not critical. I'm guessing you've made noodles (or dumplings) like this, and that additional, excruciating explanation is not necessary.
- Set a Dutch oven (good size pot) 2/3 full of water to boil. At this point, obviously the dough goes into the water. I place a good size dollop on a small cutting board and use a gently curved, sharp knife to cut perhaps 1/2" size blobs which are then vigorously swept off the board into the boiling water.
- They are done when they float to the surface. A perforated spoon is used to remove the noodles from the water which are placed in a warm serving bowl.
- I cut perhaps 3-4 dozen noodles, let them cook (very quick), remove, and proceed to add the next 3-4 dozen until all of the dough is consumed. If it looks like boiling over is about to occur, add some cold water.
- Finally: At this point you should have a pot of wonderful sauce, a bowl full of chicken pieces, and a bowl of noodles. For serving, place a good serving of noodles and half (maybe less) as much chicken into a flat bowl. Apply enough sauce to almost cover noodles and chicken.
- You may want to salt to taste. My wife likes pepper on it. I do not. In any case, Viola! That's it. I really want you to try this, as everyone on both sides of our family loves it. My instructions are laborious because attention paid to various details will produce a superb dish, while an average effort with average ingredients produce a result that is only very good.
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