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Friday, November 18, 2011

Thanksgiving Hungarian Stuffing.

Most Hungarian stuffing recipes aren't exactly precise 
with the amount of ingredients and neither is this one... 
But this should get it done.

Ingredients:
1 medium red onion
6 - 10 ribs of celery
1 stick of butter
1 cup of water
1 loaf of white bread
salt & pepper
bunches of parsley
lots of eggs (5-7)

Pre-heat oven to 350*

1: Chop up the celery & 1 medium onion, 
sauté with a stick of butter until the onions become translucent.  
(I usually use as much celery as they package together at the grocery store, without the leaves)
2: Add a cup of water to celery & onion to help it cool.


3: In a large separate bowl take the loaf of white bread and tear each piece into smallish pieces.  
They don't have to be super tiny.
4: Chop up the bunches of parsley. 
(again, I usually use the amount that comes packaged together at the grocery store)
5: Add parsley with celery and onion mixture to the bowl of bread pieces. 


6. I use about 5 eggs, but my grandma uses like 7.  
I guess it's up to you, but 5 seems to do the job.
Crack the eggs into a separate bowl & beat them together.
Pour the eggs into the bowl with the bread, parsley, celery & onion.

7. Add salt & pepper.  I usually just toss some in, but approximately 1 tsp. of salt
& 1/2 a tsp. of pepper.

8. Now mix everything together with your hands.
NOTE: This will get messy.
Mush it all together until all of the ingredients seem  to be evenly distributed. 


9.  Spread mixture evenly into an un-greased 8 1/2 by 11 baking pan.
OR put it in a bird. Depending on preference. 

10. Bake at 350* for 30 - 35 minutes. And you're done!


I paired my stuffing with...

an english muffin made from corn,  
with honey roasted turkey, 
Muenster cheese and 
apply cranberry chutney 
pressed in my panini maker. 


19 comments:

  1. what is the Hungarian name for stuffing?

    ReplyDelete
  2. I followed this exactly. It tasted very close to my Hungarian grandmother's stuffing. Thank you!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Very similar to my mother's except she grates the onion and celery and doesn't sautee.
    She also bakes her stuffing in a water bath.

    ReplyDelete
  4. My mom always made this but added sage. She always called it lite bread stuffing. She was a American from the south

    ReplyDelete