I've called it a soup, but it's actually something in between a soup and a stew. Cutting the meat and veg small makes it spoonable, but it's still good to have something to mop up those yummy juices. I served it with home made caraway rye bread.
The goulash itself was a bit of a fridge clearing exercise - I wouldn't normally have used celeriac in a goulash, but it was just reaching "use it or lose it" point, and in fact it added a lovely savouriness to the goulash and I'll make a point of always adding it in future! And of course it means it contains even more veg, and makes an already cheap cut of meat go further.
This goulash reheats beautifully (we've just eaten the leftovers for lunch) and would probably freeze well too, although I wouldn't keep it for too long in the freezer as I find anything with garlic in it can develop a musty taste after a couple of months.
Goulash Soup in
the slow cooker
ingredients (to serve 4)
500g lean stewing beef – buy it in a single piece if
possible (I used skirt)
2 tablespoons plain flour1 tablespoon paprika – hot or sweet, as you prefer, but NOT smoked
½ tsp salt
pepper
1 teaspoon dried thyme
1 tablespoon sunflower oil
750ml beef stock
4 tablespoons tomato purée
1 bayleaf
2 onions
2 cloves garlic, crushed
2 large carrots
½ a small celeriac
2 large potatoes
Mix together the flour, thyme and seasoning in a large
plastic bag. Cut the meat into small pieces, about 2 cm square, and toss with
the seasoned flour.
Heat the oil in a frying pan and brown a few pieces of meat at a
time, taking care not to overcrowd the pan. Transfer to the slow cooker pot as
done.
Peel and dice all the vegetables into roughly 1cm cubes, and
add to the pot along with the bay leaf. Blend the tomato purée into the stock
and pour over the meat and veg, then mix together.
If your slow cooker has an auto function, cook on auto for
10 hours. Otherwise cook for either 4-6 hours on High, or 1 hour on High followed by
8-10 hours on Low. Serve in soup bowls with crusty bread. I added a dollop of sour cream - not essential but rather yummy!
Mark suggested I should have garnished it with chopped parsley, but as there's no parsley in the recipe, to me that counts as an "irrelevant garnish" (one of my pet hates). However I've just thought - it DOES contain thyme, so a few leaves of fresh thyme would have prettied it up!
Since this is so cheap, easy and nourishing I'm going to spread the word by entering it into:
Extra Veg at Jo's Kitchen with Fuss Free Flavours and Utterly Scrummy Food For Friends
The Slow Cooked Challenge at Farmersgirl Kitchen
Credit Crunch Munch at Utterly Scrummy Food For Friends with Fuss Free Flavours and Fab Food 4 All
Super Soup at Jo's Kitchen
oooh, I could bathe in that!... may sound odd but it looks glorious and seeing that I am so in love with my slow cooker at the moment I can't get enough. Really lovely loaf too!
ReplyDeleteWow, that looks good Jane. I love goulash but I don't think I've ever made it in the slow cooker, will have to remedy that. Thanks for joining me for the #SlowCookedChallenge
ReplyDeleteWell this stew certainly looks delicious.
ReplyDeleteHugs Diane
This looks so good Jane! Big fan of soupy stews here - am having a freezer declutter here at the minute, may use this recipe if I come across some stewing beef!
ReplyDeleteOh Jane, you've made me really hungry right now this looks so delicious and the lovely bread to mop up the juices, yummy:-) Thanks for entering #CreditCrunchMunch:-)
ReplyDeleteLooks lovely. Please link this up to #SuperSoup too http://joskitchen.co.uk/2015/04/13/supersoup-aprilmay-2015/
ReplyDeleteIT looks yummy! I love anything I can make in the slow cooker and like you, I throw in things that wouldn't 'normally' go if I want to use them up.
ReplyDelete