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PostPosted: 11/24/09 5:16 pm • # 1 
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I usually don't cook with precise measurements but I'll give it a try

1 pound beef
1 pound pork
2 pounds onion
Hungarian paprika
majoran, cumin, pepper, salt
clove of garlic (the more the better Image)
beef stock (either cubes/water or a can)

Cut onions and saute until soft and lightly brown
add paprika and stir
Cut meat (or have the butcher do it) in roughly 2 inch cubes
add to onions and quickly let brown while stirring often
add majoran, cummin and pepper and the smashed garlic
stir one more time and then add beef stock (heat up the stock before adding to meat or meat will be tough!)
let it cook for 30 to 40 minutes
make some roux and use it to thicken up your gulasch
salt to taste

serve over bohemian yeast dumplings and with a lump of sour creme

Oh, the bohemian yeast dumplings which go with this gulasch really great are easy too. That's a recipe for another day. Image


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PostPosted: 11/25/09 7:01 am • # 2 
I wonder if this would work served over spaetzle?


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PostPosted: 11/25/09 7:19 am • # 3 
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Location: Tampa, Florida
Of course. Homemade ones.

Quote:
3 cups flour
4 eggs
1-2 teaspoons salt
1 quart cold water

Stir together the flour, eggs, and salt in a bowl with 1/2
cup of cold water, then beat this mixture until bubbles start to appear and you have a smooth batter that no longer adheres to the spoon. Add just as much water--a little at a time as is necessary to achieve this consistency. This was my moms rule #1 of Spatzle making.
Mastering the delicate task of grating off or slicing off the requisite amount of spaetzle dough (called schaben, or shaving," in Swabia) really does take a certain amount of practice.
That being said, the next step is to bring salted water to a boil in a LARGE pot. The next step depends on your choice of forming. Cut or shave fine strips of dough and push them into the pot of boiling water.
When the spaezle bob back to the surface, remove them with a skimming spoon, briefly (and gently) swish them around in a pan of cold water to remove the floury film from the surface, then leave them in another pot of hot water to keep warm. Continue, in batches, until all the dough is used.
I use this machine
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