Mystery author Julia
Buckley, who writes The Writer’s Apprentice Series, The Undercover Dish Series,
and the new Hungarian Tea House Series, is the child of European parents—one
Hungarian, one German. She grew up eating good food. Chicken Paprikás was one of the staples of her diet, and she joins us today to share
the recipe for it. Learn more about Julia and her books at her website.
Chicken Paprikás: A Hungarian Meal You Won’t Forget
In my new mystery novel, Death
in a Budapest Butterfly, Hana Keller often consumes food made by her
grandmother, an innate cook who was born in Hungary and cooks, as my own
grandmother did, by instinct.
Chicken Paprikás is a popular Hungarian dish; I’ve tasted a
lot of versions of it in my life, and not one has yet rivaled my grandmother’s.
I’ve tried for years to come close to the flavor I remember from my childhood,
and now I’ve got my husband on the case, since he is the cook in the family.
The recipe is relatively simple and surprisingly delicious
when you consider the paucity of ingredients. But it’s in the blending of the
ingredients that the genius lies (and, I fear, in the lard that was a staple of
my grandmother’s cooking and which heart specialists encourage us not to eat
nowadays).
Another trick to making good paprikás is the paprika. If
it’s not from Hungary, you’re not getting the flavor you could be achieving. I
recently found that I could order from Bende, Inc. online and get Szeged
paprika imported from Szeged, Hungary. I got a large bag and it’s delicious.
Chicken
Paprikás (Csirkepaprikás)
1 chopped onion
1 tablespoon shortening
1 tablespoon paprika
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
2 tablespoons salt
4–5 pound chicken, disjointed
1-1/2 cups water
1/2 pint sour cream
Sauté the onion in either shortening or
butter. Add paprika, pepper, and salt and stir well; lay chicken pieces in pot
and simmer for about 10 minutes. Add water to the mixture, cover, and simmer
until chicken is tender. Remove chicken (place temporarily on plate or platter)
and add sour cream to the spices and drippings; mix well. Add dumplings and
place chicken on top of dumplings. Heat and serve. If more gravy is required,
add ½ pint sweet cream to the sour cream mixture.
When the dish is finished, you’ll normally want to pair it
with dumplings, and there are a variety of recipes for Hungarian dumplings
online. You don’t want the little German spaetzli, but the dumplings called
Nokedli. However, you don’t need to push them through a pasta strainer, as the
fancy recipes say. My mom just made them in a glass bowl with a spout, and she
flicked the dough into boiling water in one-inch sections, one after the other.
The dumplings are finished when they rise to the surface. Make sure they don’t
stick to the bottom.
In my husband’s latest crack at paprikás, he substituted
chicken breasts for the legs, but I think you lose some of the flavor when you
don’t have the bone-in chicken. Also, he used egg noodles at the end (delicious,
but not the same).
Try making this dish for your family; if you’ve never had it
before, the flavor will be your reward! If you’ve eaten this dish in the past,
then you know how good it is. Enjoy!
Death in a Budapest Butterfly
A Hungarian Teahouse Mystery, Book
1
Hana Keller and her family run Maggie's Tea House, an establishment
heavily influenced by the family's Hungarian heritage and specializing in a
European-style traditional tea service. But one of the shop's largest draws is
Hana's eccentric grandmother, Juliana, renowned for her ability to read the
future in the leaves at the bottom of customers' cups. Lately, however, her
readings have become alarmingly ominous and seemingly related to old Hungarian
legends...
When a guest is poisoned at a tea event, Juliana’s dire predictions
appear to have come true. Things are brought to a boil when Hana’s beloved
Anna Weatherley butterfly teacup becomes the center of the murder
investigation as it carried the poisoned tea. The cup is claimed as evidence by
a handsome police detective, and the pretty Tea House is suddenly
endangered. Hana and her family must catch the killer to save their
business and bring the beautiful Budapest Butterfly back home where it belongs.
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4 comments:
Thanks for hosting me, Lois! I hope your readers enjoy the recipe.
This sounds really good! The book and the recipe. ;-)
We're always happy to have you drop by, Julia!
Sounds like a fun mystery, and I love the recipe—simple and spicy.
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