Showing posts with label European cuisine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label European cuisine. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 8, 2022

Pork Brauhaus Goulash

For dinner, last night, we needed some good ol' fashioned comfort food. I'm not really into the stuff that quite a few Americans think of as being comfort food. To me, comfort embodies European peasant food. It's filling. It's hearty. It utilizes few ingredients while maximizing on flavor. This goulash recipe checks off all of the boxes.


I used a pork tenderloin to make this dish. It was tender. It was succulent. Bob was, easily, able to eat it.


I cut the pork tenderloin into bite sized pieces. It gets browned in a few tablespoons of butter. While that is going on, you'll want to...

grate up a large carrot (or 2 small ones), dice up an onion and mince a clove or two of garlic. Just put it onto a plate and set it aside for a few minutes until you need it. 



Do you see that liquid in the bottom of the pan? You want to cook the pork until that all disappears. 



It will look like this once that happens. This is when you add the vegetables and garlic, mustard, tomato paste,  along with the salt, pepper and smoked paprika. 



Cook that all for around 3-4 minutes. Then add...


a cup of German beer. I used a nice German stout. If you don't have a German beer available to you, try a Black Butte Porter or a Guinness would work really well, too.  Don't use a domestic American beer. That would not taste good at all. It actually wouldn't taste.
Cook until the beer evaporates.


It will go from this to...



this. What you are doing is concentrating the beer flavor. That's why I do not recommend using an domestic American beer. They do not taste good and they wouldn't have enough flavor to hold up to this recipe. You really need to use a stout.



After the beer cooks down, you add in vegetable broth and bring it all to a boil. Cover, put on low heat and simmer for an hour.
Five minutes before it's done, add...


the sour cream. Combine thoroughly. If you need to thicken it up, use a cornstarch slurry. That's simple to make. Mix 1 tablespoon of cornstarch with a few tablespoons of cold water. Pour it in, stir until it's as thick as you'd like it to be. 



Serve over mashed potatoes and enjoy!

Pork Brauhaus Goulash

1 pork tenderloin, between 1.25-1.5 pounds, cut into bite sized cubes
2 tablespoons butter
2 teaspoons dijon mustard
1 tablespoon tomato paste
1 medium onion, diced
1 clove garlic, minced
1 large carrot, grated
1 cup stout beer
3 cups vegetable broth
2 teaspoons smoked paprika
Salt & pepper, to taste
1 tablespoon sour cream

Brown pork in butter, in large skillet, over medium heat. Cook until all the liquid that is released from the pork has evaporated. Add onion, garlic, carrots, mustard, tomato paste, salt, pepper and paprika. Cook for 4-5 minutes, stirring constantly. Add beer. Cook until beer has evaporated from pan. Add broth. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat, cover, and simmer for 1 hour. At the 55 minute mark, stir in the sour cream until combined. At that time, if you feel it's necessary, thicken with a cornstarch slurry (1 tablespoon cornstarch mixed with 2 tablespoons water). Serve over mashed potatoes.

Monday, June 14, 2021

Brizola Sto Fourno


 Every delicious dinner starts with an idea. It's been raining pretty much the entire weekend here. The upside is that I don't need to water my garden, the downside is that I had to put a towel over my head and shoulders to go out and pick our salad greens yesterday. It was a warm rain, so I'm okay with that. I love growing my own lettuces. You just cannot begin to find these types or varieties in a store and you'd be hard pressed (or, at least, I would be) to even find them at a farmers market. I have Red Romaine, Sword, Buttercrunch and Drunk Woman Frizzy Head. 

Last night's meal started out with some potatoes that I needed to use up.
I had Bob run into the little market up in Castle Rock on Friday as I needed some yogurt and milk. He came home with some really nice looking bone-in pork chops. In a couple of days, he'll be getting all of his top teeth pulled out (when he had radiation treatment for cancer, 11 years ago, it wiped out his teeth), so whatever Bob wants to eat, I'll fix it for him. I get to decide the style, however.
I found a recipe that I talked to my sister, Ginger, about and we both agreed that it sounded unusual to us...but it was just too unusual to not make it. I did cut the recipe in half. Click here to view the recipe.

As with any recipe that is really delicious, it starts out with some potatoes. 

Here is the "unusual" part. You soak parchment paper in water. Yep. You read that right. You soak 2 large pieces of parchment paper in water. Get it wet. Swish it around. Let it soak for a few minutes. 

After you get done playing around with the parchment paper in the water, wring it out. Next, drape it over your baking sheet and cut up your potatoes. You could use Yukon Gold or a nice red skinned variety. It doesn't really matter.


The potatoes get seasoned with some chopped garlic, extra virgin olive oil, salt and pepper. Then you drizzle over some lemon juice (this is a Greek dish, after all!) and...


some white wine. I used a nice 2016 sauvignon blanc from right here in Washington state. We do tend to have some pretty spectacular wines produced from this state. 


After you add the wine, you cover the potatoes with the second piece of soaked parchment paper and seal it up. Then it goes into a 350-degree oven for around 40 minutes. Check it after 30 minutes because it really depends on your oven.

While the potatoes are in their lemony wine sauna, put some grill marks on your pork chops via a grill pan. Do not cook through. Remove from the pan and set aside.


After 30-45 minutes, pull the potatoes out of the oven, open the parchment sauna and...


stick the chops in on top of the potatoes. Reseal it and stick it back in for another 15 minutes or so. 

It doesn't get much better for a Sunday family dinner.