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A Hungary-Inspired Stew for the Depths of Winter

Peppers, the red, collapsed horns in particular, are heavily linked with Hungary and its rust-colored stews. The Hungarians make ground paprika from them too, which has become their most famous culinary export. Despite their South American origins, Hungary is where I have found the most dazzling displays of peppers in the markets. Two minutes, even less, from the river and the Szabadsag Bridge, Budapest’s market stalls glow deep rust and gold with tins of paprika and strings of dried mahogany chiles. I love the crumbling wooden stalls of scarlet-capped mushrooms with their stray pieces of iridescent moss, wicker baskets of black sloes, and small sacks of red berries, and the apparently precarious piles of peppers, Christmas red, clean white, and burnt orange turning scarlet. The long peppers that curl back on themselves have the intrigue of Aladdin’s lamp but are awkward in the kitchen, tending to tip their stuffing out into the baking pan. You can roast them, though, with olive oil and lots of salt, and eat them with sesame bread torn into chunks. The most useful, called Gypsy and the size of a fat rodent, are perfect for stuffing: with spinach and cream; translucent onions, capers, parsley, and garlic; cracked wheat, green olives, and toasted pine nuts; ground lamb and cumin. But mostly they are baked with a shake of the olive oil bottle and a grinding of salt until they collapse, wrinkle, and melt into silken strips. You’ll need bread then, in fat, rough chunks, and maybe a glass of bright beer. From August to the close of the year is when the market has the most from which to choose. After that the peppers come dried, in long strings of tobacco, madder, and soot. They shouldn’t be despised. By then the stalls are mostly piled with roots and cabbages, endless sausages, and wholesomely fatty pork. The paprika stalls, stacked with red and gold tins, are kitsch in a Hansel and Gretel way, their shelves covered in fastidiously ironed lace, like the old women who run them. Gulyas, or goulash, means “cowboy” and was traditionally cooked over an open fire. My paprika-scented pork stew—you could use beef-departs not too radically from the classical dish. I include dried mushrooms and cook it in a low oven, giving it a particularly deep, smoky flavor.

Ingredients

enough for 4

medium onions – 3
olive oil or dripping – 2 tablespoons
a medium-sized hot chile
sweet paprika – a heaping tablespoon
cubed pork (shoulder or leg) – 1 2/3 pounds (800g)
all-purpose flour – a tablespoon
dried porcini or other dried mushrooms–a handful, soaked in 1 3/4 cups (400ml) warm water for an hour
large, mild red peppers – 2
plum tomatoes – 14-ounce (400g) can
stock, white wine, or, if nothing else, water – 3/4 cup (200ml)
葛缕子种子,茶匙
sour cream – scant 1/2 cup (100ml)
wide noodles or boiled potatoes, to serve
  1. 圣ep 1

    Preheat the oven to 275°F (140°C). Peel and thickly slice the onions and soften them slowly in the melted fat in a deep, heavy-bottomed pan—they should be soft and crushable, and a pale, appetizing gold. Chop and seed the chile, stir it into the onions with the ground paprika, and cook for a minute or two. Remove from the pan and set aside, leaving behind any fat you can. Increase the heat a little, add the cubed meat to the pan, and let it color on all sides, adding more fat if you need to.

    圣ep 2

    Return the onions to the pan, sprinkle over the flour, cook briefly, then stir in the mushrooms and their soaking liquid. Halve and seed the peppers, cut each half into thirds, and stir them in together with the tomatoes, liquid, and caraway seeds. Bring everything to an enthusiastic simmer, season generously with salt, then cover with a lid and transfer to the oven. Bake, unpestered, for a good hour and a half. Remove from the oven, check the meat for tenderness, and remove some of the fat from the surface. Pour the sour cream over the top and stir once so that the surface is merely rippled with the cream. Serve with noodles or potatoes.

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