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Subject: The Collectors Newsletter #1003 --May 29, 2015 Date: Fri May 29 2015 07:00 pm
From: Janis Kracht To: All

8. Vintage Recipes

Be sure to check out our vintage recipe archive online at:
http://bit.ly/1vDXn6h.  Over 1200 wonderful vintage recipes are listed.  Email
recipes@tias.com if you would like to submit a recipe.

Darlene F. requested authentic Hungarian recipes. Here is a response from one
of our readers:

I married into a 100% Hungarian family.  My first gift from my fiance'-to-be
was a Hungarian cookbook!  It became very clear before our wedding six months
later that cooking Hungarian-style would be a must.

After several years' collecting and trying recipes, including ones sent in the
Hungarian language from my in-laws in Hungary, I found the seminal work for
Americans, ' The Cuisine of Hungary' by the world-renowned George Lang, still
the 'gold standard' in any edition. Not only is this work a cookbook; it also
is a history of the cuisine of the Hungarian people and culture.

Re: the request for 'Hungarian Goulash' as Americans know it,  my advice would
be to look for beef stews (called 'porkolt' in Hungarian)..  My slow-cooker
recipe includes a sweated-in-beef-scraps onion-carrot-celery base (about 1cup,
/1/2 cup,/1/2 cup per pound of browned boneless stewing beef cubes), 2 TBSP of
the best Szaged sweet paprika you can find, and 2TBSP of tomato paste.  The
last two ingedients listed each should be cooked over medium heat for a minute
or two in the vegetable/fat/beef mixture to develop the flavor.  Add beef stock 
to cover or at least 2 cups, whichever is greater.  Add salt, herb (e.g.
marjoram, OR thyme) and black pepper to taste. Follow slow cooker instructions
for beef stew.  Serve over parslied wide egg noodles or egg dumplings.  In the
area of Northern Hungary, around Budapest, the addition of about 1/3 cup sour
cream to the stew just before serving is customary.

Re: stuffed cabbage rolls, see Lang's work or many works on Jewish cuisine.
Also, my husband Imre did publish his lengthy recipe for Hungarian stuffed
cabbage rolls in a Church of the Epiphany, Royersford, PA cookbook many years
ago.  It was well received at the time.

Cheers!
Beatrice S

Linda had several requests, and here are the responses:

Melt in your Mouth Chicken Pot Pie

3 lb chicken, cooked, deboned and cut into bite size pieces 2 hard boiled eggs 1
10 3/4 oz. can condensed cream of chicken soup 2 cups chicken broth
1 cup self rising flour
1 cup buttermilk
1 stick unsalted butter
salt and pepper to taste
3/4 cup frozen or fresh green peas (canned is too mushy) 2/3 cup finely chopped 
carrots
3/4 cup finely chopped celery
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--- BBBS/Li6 v4.10 Dada-2
 * Origin: Prism bbs (1:261/38)

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