Beef Stroganoff: Difference between revisions
Tag: shouting |
|||
Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
==Notes== |
==Notes== |
||
{{Reflist}} |
{{Reflist}} |
||
USED MASHED POTATOES |
|||
==External links== |
==External links== |
Revision as of 18:10, 2 April 2010
Beef Stroganoff or Beef-Stroganov (in Russian: Бефстроганов Befstróganov) is a Russian dish of sautéed pieces of beef served in a sauce with sour cream. From its origins in 19th-century Russia, it has become popular in much of Iran, Europe, North America, Australia, South Africa, Lebanon, Portugal and Brazil, with considerable variation in the actual recipe.
Name
Various explanations are given for the name, presumably derived from some member of the large and important Stroganov family, perhaps Alexander Grigorievich Stroganoff of Odessa or a diplomat, Count Pavel Stroganov.[1]. Alternatively, the dish may named after the Russian word строгать [strogat] meaning 'to shave' or 'to slice', referring to the strips of beef used in the dish.[dubious – discuss]
History
Elena Molokhovets' classic Russian cookbook (1861) gives the first known recipe for Govjadina po-strogonovski, s gorchitseju "Beef à la Stroganov, with mustard" which involves lightly floured beef cubes (not strips) sautéed, sauced with prepared mustard and bouillon, and finished with a small amount of sour cream: no onions, no mushrooms. An 1890 competition is sometimes mentioned in the dish's history, but both the recipe and the name existed before then. A 1912 recipe adds onions and tomato paste and serves it with crisp potato straws, which are considered the traditional side dish in Russia.[2] The version given in the 1938 Larousse Gastronomique includes beef strips, and onions, with either mustard or tomato paste optional.
After the fall of Imperial Russia, the recipe was popularly served in the hotels and restaurants of China before the start of the Second World War. Russian and Chinese immigrants, as well as U.S. servicemen stationed in pre-Communist China, brought several variants of the dish to the United States, which may account for its popularity during the 1950s. It came to Hong Kong in the late fifties with Russian restaurants and hotels serving the dish with rice but not sour cream. In the version often prepared in the USA today in restaurants and hotels it consists of strips of beef filet with a mushroom, onion, and sour cream sauce and served over rice or noodles.
Popularity
In the UK and Australia a recipe very similar to that commonly found in the USA has become popular, generally served with rice. British pubs usually serve the dish to a creamy white wine style recipe, whereas more 'authentic' strogonoffs are often red stews with a scoop of sour cream separately served on top.
Beef stroganoff is also very popular in Brazil and Portugal, under the name "estrogonofe" or "Strogonoff". The Brazilian variant includes diced beef or strips of beef (usually filet mignon) with tomato sauce, onions, mushrooms and heavy whipping cream. Stroganoff is also often made with strips of chicken breast rather than beef (also called Fricassee in some restaurants in Brazil). It is commonly served with crisp potato straws, as in Russia, but with the addition of white rice. Sometimes one can also see creative servings of estrogonofe, such as a crepe filling, a topping for baked potatoes, or on pizzas. It is so popular among Brazil's urban middle class that there are fast-food chains dedicated to it in the food courts of many Brazilian shopping malls. Many recipes and variations exist: with or without wine, with canned sweet corn, with ketchup instead of tomato sauce, etc.
Stroganoff is also popular in the Nordic countries. In Sweden, a common variant is sausage stroganoff, which uses the local falukorv sausage as a substitute for the beef. Beef stroganoff is however also a common dish.
It is very popular as a basic food-service dish, because it is very easy to produce in large quantities.[citation needed]
Notes
- ^ Oxford Companion to Food, s.v. "beef".
- ^ Joyce Toomre, ed., Classic Russian Cooking: Elena Molokhovets' A Gift to Young Housewives, 1992; first edition of Molokhovets was 1861; the 1912 recipe mentioned be Toomre is in Alekandrova-Ignat'eva.
USED MASHED POTATOES
External links
- The Food Timeline has some quotes about the dish.
MASHED POTATOES