Sunday, December 24, 2023

Week 51 - Hungarian

How is it already the last week of the year?! I better step up the pace on these challenge recaps, because there are still some unfinished/unwritten 2022 challenge posts, and I don't want to add another year to that list!

Another opportunity for some progress on two challenges at once! I hadn't made anything for Hungary for the AtWCC yet since we are still in the As (and will be for the foreseeable future), but our experience with Hungarian food in general is slim. We had chimney cakes at the holiday market one year (something that I have no idea how we would replicate for the AtWCC), I had goulash at a tiny cafe in Connecticut over two decades ago, and we had something called a Hungarian pancake years ago in Chicago, but at a Polish restaurant, so possibly not even really a Hungarian dish. This challenge was an opportunity to try out a dish I've been eyeing for a long, long time - chicken paprikash (paprikás csirke).


Chicken paprikash features chicken (obviously) in a creamy sauce with lots of paprika (also obvious from the name). In the recipe I followed from Daring Gourmet, you start by browning the chicken, and then putting together a vegetable base consisting of onions, garlic, tomatoes, and Hungarian bell pepper. We don't live in a heavily Eastern European area, so there were no Hungarian bell peppers here. But in the comments, I saw that they are relatively mild and similar to banana peppers or cubanelle peppers (aka Italian peppers), the latter of which we definitely have here, so I went with that. Seasonings were a lot of paprika (used regular paprika because our spice shelf is already overflowing with no room for new ones like the imported Hungarian paprika they suggested), and also salt and pepper.


The chicken gets added back in, then covered in chicken broth to cook for a while. Once the chicken has cooked through, the sauce is made by adding in a mixture of flour, sour cream, and heavy whipping cream (used the new vegan version from Trader Joe's for the whipping cream, which seemed fine, but I really have no basis for comparison). The sauce took far longer to come together and thicken than I thought it would, so dinner ended up being far later than planned. We ate everything over some pasta (can't do egg noodles here, so just used some mafalda corta, which was a good match), with roasted asparagus and onions on the side. The total cost was approximately $16.91 for the chicken alone, about $23-24 with the pasta and vegetables. Definitely not the most expensive challenge meal we've done, and I don't know how much of that is the ingredients themselves versus the inflated grocery prices right now. Guess I will have to price the dishes out more consistently like I used to if I'm going to figure that out.


The problem with trying out a new dish you've never had before is that you're never quite sure if you got the flavor right. It tasted really good, and the sauce was very creamy with lots of paprika, but was it right? No idea. It was very rich and heavy from the sour cream and heavy whipping cream, not our most-preferred flavor profile, so we probably won't make this that often (besides the fact that it took a long time to prep and make), but it was delicious. Looking forward to the day when we can try it at a Hungarian restaurant and see how we did!

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