Buffalo Rumblings
Whether it’s tailgating or homegating, fans of the Buffalo Bills are known to be elite tier when it comes to food. Wingin’ It returns for it’s eighth season of Mad Hatter-esque recipes, taking inspiration from the Buffalo Bills and their opponents.
The internet told me Paprikash is a Cleveland staple and who am I, a human being, to argue with the hive mind electronic intelligence that in no way is certain to become self-aware and create the machinery of mankind’s demise? Anyway, even if the Terminators that told me this was a good idea are wrong, it’s still right because it’s delicious and vaguely Cleveland Browns color scheme.
Hungarian in origin (again, information fed to me by Skynet) Paprikash is so-named as a result of its heavy reliance on Hungarian paprika. Fun! My version adds some obvious Buffalo flair and celebrates the Polish roots of both sides of Lake Erie with my choice of Kluski-style noodles rather than dumplings, rice or potatoes as is tradition.
Serves: 4-6
Active Time: 30 min
Total Time: 90 min
4 Tbsp unsalted butter
1 1/2 lbs chicken thighs
1 Spanish onion, diced
3 cloves of garlic, minced
3 Tbsp fresh dill, finely minced
2 Tbsp hot Hungarian paprika
2 cups beef broth
12 oz. evaporated milk
4 Tbsp all purpose flour
Salt and pepper
Horseradish root, finely shredded
16 oz package of Kluski-style noodles or similar, prepared to package directions
This recipe is one that takes some time, but doesn’t require any crazy culinary tricks to get big flavor. I have just a few tips for you, and they’re nothing radical either.
When combining the evaporated milk and flour, you don’t need to sift it in or do anything crazy to get it smooth. This is often served over dumplings and little globs of flour will either cook in fine, or become tiny dumplings and increase the authenticity. I did a very quick stir and it worked beautifully, so don’t stress this step.
Speaking of no stress, the two pictures that start off...