T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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709.1 | Don't forget the mustard. | RDGE43::BARKER | Life on the Ocean Wave... | Fri Sep 11 1987 04:39 | 4 |
| Mustard is the other important ingredient (smooth French rather
than english or American.)
The basic recipe works quite well with Gammon.
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709.2 | | COMET::TIMPSON | Religion! Just say no. | Fri Sep 11 1987 10:32 | 29 |
|
-< ARRRRRRGGGGG! MUSTARD! HAMBURGER! AACCCCKKKK!!>-
1� to 2 pounds round steak
� cup oil
� cup flour
1 tsp. salt
� tsp oregano
� tsp thyme
1 tsp paprika
8 oz sour cream
1 can consomme'
1 med+ white onion
2 med. or 1 large bayleaf
fresh mushrooms
Mix flour,salt,oregano,thyme,paprika in a freezer bag.
cut meat into bit size pieces and then place in bag and coat in flour
mixture.
In a frying pan add oil and brown meat. add coarsely chopped onion
cook for a few more minutes and then add consomme' and 1 to 1� cans
water. add bayleaf stir and bring to a boil. reduce heat and simmer
for approximately one hour.
Add sliced mushrooms about 10 minutes before ready to serve. When
ready to serve use remaining flour mixture or cornstarch to thicken.
Stir in sour cream and remove bayleaf. Serve over rice or noodles.
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709.3 | ...mee too... | PATSPK::MEDVECKY | | Fri Sep 11 1987 13:27 | 5 |
| Let me also add my ARGGGGGGGGGGG..MUSTART...HAMBURGER....to Re-.2
Instead of round steak, sirloin tips are good....instead of water
I add a can (undiluted) of cream of mushroom soup...
Rick
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709.13 | Everything is better with wine | TALLIS::BYRNE | | Mon Sep 14 1987 16:10 | 8 |
|
I use white wine instead of water/consumme, but otherwise I make
a similar recipe to .2.
Just don't use red wine - you end up with a distinctly PINK meal.
Save the red wine to drink.
:) kasey
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709.17 | Mustard ? Yes, Mustard !! | RDGE43::BARKER | Life on the Ocean Wave... | Tue Sep 15 1987 13:12 | 24 |
| My suggestion of Mustard lead to such an outcry, that I had to
go and look up my book.
So here is the recipe, straight from a Marks & Spencers Cookery
Book ( People in the UK won't need telling how good they are )
Butter for Frying
1 Medium Onion Chopped
1/2 ( or � for those with VT240s) a pound of Button Mushrooms
1 and a half pounds of Fillet Steak
Salt & Pepper
*** 1 Teaspoon of DIJON MUSTARD ***
To Finish:
2 Tablespoons Brandy
5 floz Soured Cream
Chopped fresh parsley.
Cook as per the other recipes.
So there !
Chris. ( a la moutarde )
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709.18 | Blackberry or Regular? | MUSTNG::MEDVECKY | | Wed Sep 16 1987 08:05 | 12 |
| HOLY GOOD LORD......now hes adding BRANDY!!!!!!!
What a combo....Mustard, Brandy and Sour Cream.....are you sure
youre READING that right.....maybe youre supposed to be sipping
the brandy AS YOUR COOKING.....much as I always do with wine....
Ill try to remember to post my soup recipe tomorrow.....then Ill
try yours if you try mine.....
:-)
Rick
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709.19 | ...mmmmmmmm... | LOONMT::MEDVECKY | | Thu Sep 17 1987 14:16 | 29 |
| Well...here is my recipe
Start with about 1 pound of beef....sirloin tips are good....cut
into 1" cubes and flour...
In a pan melt 4 tbs margerine and add 3 cloves diced garlic
Saute meat until somewhat seared...remove from pan
Add 2 cups sliced oinions.....if the meat absorbed all the margerine
and garlic, add more....cook til transparant and remove
Add sliced mushrooms....as many as you wish.....saute
Put meat and onions back in pot
Add 1 can condensed cream of mushroom soup, and 1 can condensed
tomatoe soup......add 1 pint sour cream
Then add about 4 dashes tobasco sauce....
mix all.....put on low heat and simmer for 1 1/2 hours
Serve over noodles
Sounds so good I may even make some this weekend..........yours,
that is....
Rick
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709.20 | | WHICH::ADEY | drink a little red wine.... | Thu Sep 17 1987 16:23 | 7 |
| I'll back up .17, Strogonoff is traditionally made with sour cream
dijon mustard, onions, mushrooms and a good cut of meat such as
sirloin or tenderloin tips. You use a good cut of meat because this
dish is cooked fairly fast. The sour cream doesn't stand up to
prolonged cooking times without separating.
Ken....
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709.21 | Lets get Pickled! | MET730::BURNS | | Thu Sep 17 1987 17:35 | 6 |
| Pierre Franey (60 minute gourmet) recommends adding cornichons
as the final ingredient! Just slice them (if desired) and add to
the pan just before serving. It adds an interesting bite to the
finished product. Try it and see.
Greg
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709.22 | SOUR CREAM??? NEVER!!! | THE780::WILDE | Analysis, Mr. Spock? | Wed Sep 30 1987 21:07 | 20 |
| To add more fuel to the fire....the first, and best strogonoff recipe
I ever read, in a Craig Clairborne cookbook by the way, called the
version with sour cream "American strogonoff" (insert superior
sneer at this point). His PROPER recipe had filet mignon, GOOD
dijon mustard (french of course), onion, mushrooms, and a dash of dry RED
wine, garlic and pepper to taste and the cornicons...
saute onions, then meat chunks in lots of unsalted butter until rare
remove meat, and onions, add mushrooms and brown for a few minutes
remove mushrooms, deglaze pan with approx. 1/2 cup red wine,
add 1 - 2 tablespoons good dijon mustard, mix well and cook
down for a few minutes, return meat, mushrooms to pan, add
garlic and pepper and cornicons (spelling on this may be bad)
Heat to serving temp.
Serve with buttered parslied noodles.
Working from memory here, but it was real close to this! Really
tasty stuff.
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709.24 | Must have the mustard | PSTJTT::TABER | Out of sight, out of range. | Fri Oct 02 1987 10:40 | 17 |
| If you're familiar with French cooking, you'll know they use mustard on
almost anything. Given that Beef Stronganoff was supposedly invented by
Stroganoff's French chef, then I would guess the mustard is orthodox.
Time-Life put out a book on Russian cooking once and for "Bev Stroganov"
(I think that's how the spelt it) they gave instructions for whipping up
a mustard sauce using (I think) 2tbs. dried mustard, 1tsp. sugar, a
pinch ofsalt and a enough (about 1tbs) wetting agent (could be wine or
water) to make a paste. Mix up the paste when you start preparations,
and mix it in just before you add the sour cream.
Up to that point I had never used mustard in beef Stroganoff, but I
tried it and it was great! Now I slip it in on people and don't tell
them about it. Gets rave reviews and nobody can figure out what gives
the slight zing.
>>>==>PStJTT
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709.31 | Beef Stroganoff | DPDMAI::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Tue Mar 15 1988 08:58 | 26 |
| 2 pounds round steak, cut in thin strips
2 tablespoons flour
1 teaspoon salt
dash of pepper
2 onions, chopped fine
1/2 pound chopped mushrooms
1 or 2 cloves garlic
4 tablespoons butter or margarine
1 can beef bouillon
1 teaspoon paprika
1 tablespoon Worcestershire
salt and pepper to taste
2 cups sour cream
cooked noodles
Cut meat into thin strips. Dredge in flour, salt, and pepper.
Saute onions, mushrooms, and garlic in butter. Add meat and brown
lightly. Add bouillon and simmer meat until tender (at least 2
hours). Add Worcertershire and paprika. Add a little water during
cooking to keep meat tender. Before serving, add sour cream and
heat just till hot (do not boil after sour cream has been added).
Serve stroganoff over noodles. Serves 6.
Note: To cut down cooking time, this may be done in the pressure
cooker for about 15 minutes, but the flavors will not be as good
as with the long, slow cooking method.
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709.32 | Don't try to freeze sour cream! | DPDMAI::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Wed Mar 23 1988 14:22 | 7 |
| It will freeze fine if you do it *without* the sour cream. You can
then thaw it, warm it, and stir in the sour cream just before serving.
Glad you enjoyed it -- it's one of our favorites!
Pat
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709.29 | Pork stroganoff variation | EVOAI1::HULLAH | Jacquie Hullah @EVO | Tue Sep 11 1990 06:52 | 16 |
| re .28 - please post your "real recipe", I'd be interested to see
how it compares to the one I've been making for years and which
has never seen canned soups (wouldn't know one if I saw one) or
mustard ... Hamburger? I always use the best quality beef I can
find, otherwise I don't cook stroganoff.
Instead of sour cream, I've been using natural yoghurt for years,
and prefer the flavour.
A variant: Pork stroganoff - use very good quality fillet of pork
instead of the beef. Not authentic, but a different dish, and cheaper
than fillet steak.
Jacquie
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709.30 | one more - not authentic, just tasty | SUBWAY::MAXSON | Repeal Gravity | Sat Nov 10 1990 00:09 | 22 |
| Beef Stroganof - Rev 1.0
2 lbs. stew beef, chopped 2 cups small whole mushrooms, halved
1/2 cup flour 3 beef bouillion cubes
3 T black pepper 2 t cayenne (red) pepper
2 cloves garlic, crushed 1 cup milk
2 T peanut oil 1 cup water
2 medium onions, diced 1 lb egg noodles
1 10 oz can cream of mushroom soup 3 T salt
Place flour, beef and black pepper in bowl and mix until beef is well
coated. Place oil in skillet and apply medium heat. Add garlic and
gently fry for two minutes. Remove garlic and discard. Brown beef
in skillet thoroughly, add onions and cayenne and continue frying
until onions become tender. Add water and bouillion cubes, mix, and
bring to a boil. Cover and simmer for thirty minutes. Add mushroom
soup, mushrooms, milk, salt. Mix well, and simmer covered for an
additional fifteen minutes. Bring noodles to boil, simmer uncovered
for fifteen minutes, drain, and add butter. To serve, place 1 cup
noodles in individual bowls and add 1/2 cup of stroganof on top.
Serves 4-6.
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709.33 | Chicken, Stroganoff Style | POWDML::SIMARD | | Wed Oct 16 1991 16:57 | 66 |
| copied without permission from Idylwilde Farms - Audrey Stoddard,
1991
***************************************************************
I've always had a soft spot for beef stroganoff because it was
one of the first "gourmet" dishes I ever attempted some thirty
plus years ago, and I make it about once a year for nostalgic
reasons as well as for good tast. The last time I made it, it
occurred to me that a somewhat lighter and healthier dish might
be made with chicken; I tried it and was pleased with the
result. (This chicken version is also much quicker to make than
the traditional beef stroganoff.) I think noodles are the right
accompaniment, and I use wide ones that collect as much sauce as
possible!
Serves 6
6 boneless, skinless chicken breast halves-pounded to about 1/4
thickness
about 1/4 cup of flour
2-3 tbs butter
2-3 tbs olive oil
1 large, white onion, coarsely chopped
1/2 pound fresh mushrooms, sliced, coarse stem parts removed
2 cloves of garlic, minced
2 bay leaves, crumbled
2 tbs of flour
1-2 tbls Hungarian paprika
1 tsp tomato paste
1/4 cup tomato juice
1/4 cu chicken stock
1/4 cu white wine
1/2 cu yogurt
1/2 cu sour cream
sald and pepper to taste
chopped fresh parsley for garnish
Slice the chicken breasts into strips about 1/2 inche wide; toss
them with enough flour to coat them very lightly. Heat 1 tbs
butter and 1 tbs olive oil in a large skillet or wok, and stir-
fry the chicken until almost, but not quite, done-2 or 3 minutes
should be enough. (You may need to do this in several batches,
adding a bit more oil and butter as you go.) Remove the chicken
to a casserole dish. Add the remaining butter and oil to the
skillet; add the onion, mushrooms, garlic and bay leaves; cover
and cook until the mushrooms and onions are done. Remove them
with a slotted spoon. Stir the flour, the paprika and tomatoe
paste into the juices in the skillet. Add the tomato juice,
stock and white wine, and cook until you have a smooth, thick
sauce. Return the chicken, onions and mushrooms to the skillet;
add the yogurt and the sour cream, and cook over low heat
until heated through. Add salt and pepper to taste. Sprinkle with
chopped fresh parsley, and serve over buttered noodles.
NOTE: I had about a cup of leftover stroganoff which I pureed,
then thinnned with some stock. I added some curry powder and had
a delicious soup which I garnished with a little chopped apple.
************************
I personally like the previous one with the cheese and cranberries.
NIce fall afternoon treat!
Ferne
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709.34 | different places - different habits | VAXRIO::ROLF | Vaporware Design Specialist | Fri May 27 1994 11:55 | 16 |
| Interesting to notice a basic difference between all the recepies posted,
which I presume come from USA and Europe, and what is served here in
Brazil.
Strogonof (thats how we spell it here) is very popular an can be found
in most regular restaurants, however it is NEVER served with noodles,
but with sauteed and parsleyed potatoes and white rice instead! Also,
the more sophysticated restaurants flamb� the dish with Cognac on the
plate.
The chicken version is also quite popular, but you can also use shrimp
instead (probably wouldn't want to use the boullion with this variety).
I've never heard of the pork version though.
Rolf, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
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