You know what amazes me?
Flour.
Yup, just that – flour.
I mean, think about it. You take flour, add in just a few other ingredients, and you get everything from bread to pasta to dumplings. On top of that, you can use flour to make crunchy, crispy coating for fried chicken or really fried anything. And when a sauce is too thin, you mix up some flour with butter to make a roux and your watery sauce will turn silky in no time. Or you let the roux brown and you’re well on your way to making Louisianan goodies like gumbo and etouffé, which let me assure you, is on my must-cook list of 2010.
So when I was browsing through the latest issue of Saveur and came upon this ridiculous (as in ridiculously gorgeous) photo of chicken paprikash, with a recipe that uses flour to both make the dumplings and coat the chicken, I did not hesitate. One glance over at my bin of flour to check that I have enough at hand and off I went to shop for the other ingredients. Although the recipe calls for a whole chicken cut up into pieces, it would work just as well if you bought an equivalent amount of whatever chicken parts you like. I’m personally a dark meat person, so next time I make this, I may just buy some thighs, drumsticks, and wings.
Adapted from recipe in Saveur Jan/Feb 2010. Basically, I omitted taking off the skin from the chicken and also just chopped up the tomatoes without bothering to seed and core them.
7 Comments
“Add paprika, half the peppers, tomatoes and onions.” So, er, what happens to the other half? And is that “half the (peppers, tomatoes and onions)” or “(half the peppers), tomatoes and onions”?
Also, how should the dumplings be on the inside? Pasta-like throughout? That’s what I was expecting, but ours got a little chewy on the inside. Perhaps mine were too round, not “walnut” shaped enough.
Anyhow, thanks for the recipe! Reminds us a lot of our time in the Czech Republic.
Hi Todd!
Woops — my bad! It should be (half the peppers) + (all tomatoes + onions). When I made this, I actually just went ahead and put all the peppers in with the tomatoes and onions. The original Saveur recipe told you to save half the peppers to garnish the finished dish with, so that’s the other option. Thanks for noting the typo!!
The dumplings you got sound like what I got too. Not having had chicken paprikash before, I’m not sure what the “real” thing should be like. I think next time I make it, I will try to make the dumplings a little smaller and hope that will overcome the chewy/slightly doughy middle. Nathan tells me that the dumplings he ate in Prague were more bread-y than pasta-y, so maybe we’re not far off!
Yay for trying this out!! I hope even with the chewy dumplings, you guys had a yummy meal!
angi
Mmm, we made this tonight with all chicken thighs, and it was delicious. Our sauce wasn’t nearly as red as yours though – maybe we have wimpy paprika. We had to substitute kwark for sour cream, and I made the dumplings small and fried them a little longer in the butter since I love when they get the browned edges.
We found a great dessert to go with it from Saveur too:
http://www.saveur.com/article/Recipes/Hungarian-Shortbread
Yay! And hopefully, one day, I’ll get to visit you guys and try this “kwark” business — it sounds so physics-y!! And you’re probably right about the color – I mean, not necessarily that your paprika was wimpy but maybe just less red. :) Now I must mark down that Hungarian Shortbread for the future.
I made this today and it was great! I just put all the peppers in with the tomato and onion and it was great. I didn’t think uncooked peppers on top would be very good.
Dumplings were a bit tough and chewy…I might try to find another recipe and make them fluffier. Or try egg noodles.
Also, I live in Turkey and can’t get sour cream but yogurt worked well.
Yay – I’m so happy to hear that you tried and liked the paprikash, Jill! And I do have to agree that these dumplings don’t come out as tender as I like, so if you find another recipe that’s better, I would love to hear about it.
Saveur seems to screw up simple home-style recipes. This recipe has far too much bell pepper and tomato. Both are present to just balance the other ingredients. Csirke Paprikás has only a hint of tomato. And the nokedli (dumpling) recipe is all wrong. The size should be very small; at most no bigger than 1 inch long. My own recipe (from my grandmother) has more egg in it with a touch of nutmeg. And the nokedli are never sautéed in butter!