Embark on a culinary journey to the heart of Hungary with the delectable Clay Pot Hungarian Chicken Paprikás, a dish that captures the essence of rustic charm and heartwarming flavors. This traditional Hungarian stew, also known as Chicken Paprikash, is a symphony of succulent chicken, sweet paprika, and a velvety sauce that dances on your palate. Discover the secrets behind this beloved dish as we unveil two irresistible recipes: the Classic Clay Pot Hungarian Chicken Paprikás, a timeless masterpiece that embodies the authentic Hungarian experience, and the One-Pot Hungarian Chicken Paprikás, a modern twist that streamlines the cooking process without compromising on taste. Prepare to tantalize your taste buds and immerse yourself in the rich culinary heritage of Hungary with these exceptional recipes.
Here are our top 8 tried and tested recipes!
EASY HUNGARIAN CHICKEN PAPRIKASH
An easy Hungarian chicken paprikash recipe using traditional Hungarian sweet paprika... Also known as Chicken Paprikas or Csirkepaprikás, this simple spicy & creamy chicken recipe served over broad egg noodles boasts big flavor!
Provided by Tara Kuczykowski
Categories Main Dishes
Time 45m
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Dice the onion, and cut the chicken breasts and thighs into bite-size chunks.
- In a large skillet, sauté the onion in the butter over medium heat until translucent. Meanwhile, toss the diced chicken pieces with about two tablespoons of flour. Add the coated chicken to the pan, and brown on all sides. Once the chicken is browned, add the sweet paprika, salt, and pepper, and stir well.
- Slowly add the chicken broth to the pan, and use a wooden spoon to scrape and deglaze the bottom of the skillet. Cover and simmer on low for 25 minutes. While the chicken is simmering, prepare the No Yolks noodles according to the directions on the package.
- Remove the chicken to a plate. Whisk about one tablespoon of flour into the drippings left in the skillet to thicken. Turn off the heat and stir in the sour cream. Add the chicken back to the sauce and stir to coat.
- Season to taste with additional salt, and serve immediately over broad egg noodles.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 595 calories, Carbohydrate 49.2 grams carbohydrates, Cholesterol 163.8 milligrams cholesterol, Fat 23.5 grams fat, Fiber 3.5 grams fiber, Protein 44.2 grams protein, SaturatedFat 13.3 grams saturated fat, Sodium 1019.9 milligrams sodium, Sugar 7.3 grams sugar
HUNGARIAN CHICKEN PAPRIKASH
Csirke Paprikas is the Hungarian term for this delicious dish. My mom has been making this for 35 years! Recently she went to visit Budapest and found this little cafe that served it. She liked it so well, she modified her recipe to closely match that, and here it is, enjoy! Serve over rice or egg noodles.
Provided by katja
Categories World Cuisine Recipes European Eastern European Hungarian
Time 1h55m
Yield 4
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- Place a large pot or Dutch oven over medium heat and cook bacon until crisp, about 4 minutes. Add onion and cook until soft and translucent, 3 to 5 minutes, stirring once or twice. Add chicken and tomatoes. Cover and cook over medium-low heat for 10 minutes. Stir in paprika. Pour in 1/2 cup to 3/4 cup water and season with salt. Cover and simmer over low heat for 25 minutes. Remove lid and cook an additional 5 minutes.
- Transfer chicken to a plate and keep warm. Mix sour cream and 1 teaspoon cold water together in a small bowl. Add mixture to the pot and stir until gravy is evenly colored and smooth. Return chicken to the pot, cover and simmer on low for another 30 minutes.
- Meanwhile, stir flour and salt together in a bowl. In a separate bowl mix egg and water together. Gradually add flour mixture and stir together until dumpling batter is very thick and mixture breaks from a spoon.
- Bring 2 quarts of water to a boil in a large pot. Add 2 teaspoons salt.
- Drop 1/2 teaspoons of dumpling batter into the boiling water. Dumplings will rise to the surface in about 1 minute; boil for 5 minutes more. Use a slotted spoon to transfer dumplings to a bowl. Repeat steps until batter is used up and all dumplings are cooked. Mix 1 teaspoon of butter with cooked dumplings. Add dumplings to chicken mixture in the pot and allow to heat through.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 670.9 calories, Carbohydrate 76.5 g, Cholesterol 138.9 mg, Fat 23.5 g, Fiber 4.3 g, Protein 35.1 g, SaturatedFat 9 g, Sodium 1793.2 mg, Sugar 4.2 g
AUTHENTIC CHICKEN PAPRIKASH (PAPRIKáS CSIRKE)
One of the most famous and beloved of all Hungarian dishes, this authentic Chicken Paprikash features chicken in an unforgettably rich, flavorful and creamy paprika-infused sauce! It's pure heaven!
Provided by Kimberly Killebrew
Categories Main Course
Time 1h
Number Of Ingredients 14
Steps:
- Heat the lard in a heavy pot and brown the chicken on all sides. Transfer the chicken to a plate. In the same oil, add the onions and fry until golden brown. Add the garlic and tomatoes (and pepper if using) and fry another 2-3 minutes. Remove the pot from the heat and stir in the paprika, salt and pepper (paprika becomes bitter if scorched).
- Return the chicken to the pot and place it back over the heat. Pour in the chicken broth. The chicken should be mostly covered. Bring it to a boil. Cover, reduce the heat to medium-low and simmer for 40 minutes. Remove the chicken and transfer to a plate.
- In a small bowl, stir the flour into the sour cream/cream mixture to form a smooth paste. Stir the cream mixture into the sauce, whisking constantly to prevent lumps. Bring it to a simmer for a couple of minutes until the sauce is thickened. Add salt and pepper to taste. Return the chicken to the sauce and simmer to heat through.
- Serve the chicken paprikash with Hungarian nokedli, which is like German Spaetzle only they're very short and stubby. You can make nokedli with a spätzle scraper and using this recipe for the dough.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 516 kcal, Carbohydrate 11 g, Protein 32 g, Fat 37 g, SaturatedFat 14 g, Cholesterol 148 mg, Sodium 744 mg, Fiber 2 g, Sugar 3 g, ServingSize 1 serving
CLAY POT CHICKEN WITH GARLIC CARROTS AND POTATOES
This is our family's favorite recipe. I created this recipe when I purchased my first clay pot. Chicken will be very moist and tender; potatoes are done in the same pot. What more could you want? Easy, delicious and great looking dish. I promise, that even your pickiest eaters will be asking for seconds.
Provided by AngelaSept
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 1h45m
Yield 4 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- Soak clay pot for 15 min.
- Rub chicken with garlic, salt, pepper, caraway seeds, parsley, Italian dressing and marinate overnight ( optional) You can rub your chicken and bake it right away, but it will taste much better , if marinated.
- In a clay pot, add potatoes, carrots and chicken on top.
- Place your clay pot in the cold oven and roast at 430F for 1.5 hours.
VIETNAMESE CLAY POT CHICKEN
This is a delicious and well known Vietnamese dish which you can prepare in your own home. Many traditional Vietnamese recipes are prepared in a clay pot, which is first soaked in water before being placed in a cold oven. As the pot heats up in the oven, tiny water particles are released, causing a pressure-steaming effect to cook the food. The result? Intensified flavour and tenderness, retention of nutrients and vitamins, and a wonderful aroma when the lid is removed. If using your clay pot for the first time, submerge it and the lid overnight in cold water, then proceed with the recipe. Thereafter the pot and lid need only be soaked for 15 minutes prior to using. It is important to use an unglazed clay pot, not a terra cotta baking pot with glazed interior and unglazed exterior. When removing the hot clay pot from the oven, always set it on a cloth pad or towel rather than a cold surface, or the sudden change in temperature may crack the pot. Preparation time for this recipe does not include soaking the pot or the time needed to marinate the chicken.
Provided by Daydream
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 1h15m
Yield 4-6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- Remove the skin from the chicken.
- Mix all marinade ingredients together in a large bowl, add the chicken pieces and stir gently.
- Cover and place in the fridge for at least three hours, but not more than 24 hours.
- Place chicken, marinade, quartered onions, bok choy and chicken stock into the soaked clay pot, and mix gently.
- Cover and place the clay pot into a cold oven.
- Turn oven temperature to 360F - 375F (moderate heat).
- Bake for 1 hour or until chicken is tender.
- If using shiitake mushrooms, add 15 minutes before the end of cooking time.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 333.5, Fat 9.7, SaturatedFat 2.4, Cholesterol 189.5, Sodium 1179.5, Carbohydrate 11.8, Fiber 1.6, Sugar 5, Protein 48.4
CLAY POT CREAMY PAPRIKA CHICKEN
If you don't have a clay pot you can easily make this in any oven dish or even on the stove top.
Provided by barbara lentz
Categories Chicken
Time 1h5m
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- 1. Soak for clay pot for 15 minutes in cold water. Drain. Add the onions and garlic to the bottom of the clay pot. Top with the chicken pieces and season with the paprika , salt and pepper. Pour the wine around the chicken. Cover and place in cold oven. Turn oven to 450 degrees. Bake for 45 minutes.
- 2. Turn the oven off. Remove the chicken and set aside. Stir the sour cream into the onion sauce. Return the chicken to the pot and place back in oven for 10 more minutes to get the sauce hot.
- 3. Serve over hot buttered noodles
CHICKEN WITH 40 CLOVES OF GARLIC IN A CLAY POT
I found this recipe in Consumer Guide to Clay Cookery. Though it sounds like a lot of garlic - the peeled cloves cook into sweet, mellow nuggets of flavor - great to spread on crusty french bread. The chicken cooks up moist and tender. This recipe is cooked in a clay pot that must be soaked in cold water for 15 minutes and is placed in a cold oven to start.
Provided by Herb Lady
Categories Chicken
Time 1h45m
Yield 5-6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Soak top and bottom of 3 1/4 quart clay cooker in water about 15 minutes; drain.
- Line bottom and sides of cooker with parchment paper.
- Combine olive oil, garlic and herbs in cooker.
- Rinse and pat dry chicken reserving neck and giblets for other use.
- Place chicken over garlic mixture.
- Drizzle with lemon juice.
- Sprinkle with salt and pepper.
- Place covered cooker in COLD oven.
- Set oven at 475 degrees F.
- Bake until chicken is tender and juices run clear when thigh is pierced, about 1 1/4 hours.
- Remove cover; bake until chicken is crisp and brown.
- 5 to 10 minutes.
- Carve chicken and spoon cooking liquid over chicken.
- Serve with garlic and french bread.
HUNGARIAN CHICKEN PAPRIKA
This is a recipe for Chicken Paprika, a recipe my father brought over from Hungary. It is simply marvelous. (It bears no relationship to Cacciatore.)
Provided by Sam29839
Categories Whole Chicken
Yield 6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- Sauce procedure: Cut whole chicken into it's constituent parts (breasts, thigh, etc.) and remove skin. Remove skin from thighs. (trim fat deposits and rinse all chicken thoroughly) This step is critical.
- Cut all chicken pieces in half. This exposes the crucial bone marrow. The more marrow you expose, the better the sauce. I chop the wings into 4 or five pieces. Do not add giblets and neck.
- In large pot, combine chicken, salt, Paprika, chicken base, and enough water to just cover the chicken pieces.
- Cook, partially covered, at such temperature that a simmer to very gentle boil is achieved. You want just a bit of bubbling.
- Do so until the chicken is thoroughly cooked and easily removed from the bone--About 1.5 hrs. (I cook the chicken until it is on the verge of falling off the bone. This extracts maximum flavor from the chicken.)
- Strain mixture to separate liquid and chicken. Place chicken into a warm serving dish.
- Return liquid to pot, and vigorously mix in sour cream and milk. I use a whisk for this. Carefully bring the sauce to a boil and remove immediately from heat. Failure to remove promptly will result in very messy boiling over!
- Set burner to it's lowest setting and return pot to the burner to keep sauce hot. The sauce is basically finished at this point. You may wish to fine tune by adding more salt, sour cream, Paprika, and/or chicken base. I sometimes add a 1/2 cup or so of heavy cream for added richness. You may also want to skim most of the liquid fat from the sauce surface.
- Noodles procedure: Combine flour, salt, and eggs in a hemispherical bowl large enough to accommodate mixing.
- Add about 1/2 cup water and proceed to blend ingredients with a fork until well blended. The consistency your striving for is such that the dough is clearly wet, adheres to the bowl, and is loose enough to slowly spread out when a dollop is applied to the cutting board. Add enough water to achieve this. I've never measured how much water I use, but think it's about 1/2 cup plus some. Actually, the consistency is not critical. I'm guessing you've made noodles (or dumplings) like this, and that additional, excruciating explanation is not necessary.
- Set a Dutch oven (good size pot) 2/3 full of water to boil. At this point, obviously the dough goes into the water. I place a good size dollop on a small cutting board and use a gently curved, sharp knife to cut perhaps 1/2" size blobs which are then vigorously swept off the board into the boiling water.
- They are done when they float to the surface. A perforated spoon is used to remove the noodles from the water which are placed in a warm serving bowl.
- I cut perhaps 3-4 dozen noodles, let them cook (very quick), remove, and proceed to add the next 3-4 dozen until all of the dough is consumed. If it looks like boiling over is about to occur, add some cold water.
- Finally: At this point you should have a pot of wonderful sauce, a bowl full of chicken pieces, and a bowl of noodles. For serving, place a good serving of noodles and half (maybe less) as much chicken into a flat bowl. Apply enough sauce to almost cover noodles and chicken.
- You may want to salt to taste. My wife likes pepper on it. I do not. In any case, Viola! That's it. I really want you to try this, as everyone on both sides of our family loves it. My instructions are laborious because attention paid to various details will produce a superb dish, while an average effort with average ingredients produce a result that is only very good.
Tips:
Use high-quality ingredients
The quality of your ingredients will have a big impact on the flavor of your dish. Use fresh, organic vegetables and free-range, hormone-free chicken.
Brown the chicken before stewing it
Browning the chicken before stewing it will help to develop its flavor and color. Be sure to brown the chicken in a hot skillet over medium-high heat until it is golden brown on all sides.
Use a good quality paprika
Paprika is the key ingredient in this dish, so be sure to use a good quality one. Look for a paprika that is labeled "Hungarian sweet" or "Hungarian half-sharp." This type of paprika has a deep, rich flavor that will add a lot to your dish.
Conclusion:
A hearty and flavorful dish that is perfect for a cold winter day
Clay pot Hungarian chicken paprika is a hearty and flavorful dish that is perfect for a cold winter day. The chicken is tender and juicy, and the sauce is rich and creamy. This dish is also relatively easy to make, so it is a great option for a weeknight meal. Serve it with mashed potatoes, rice, or noodles.
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