“Oh, Dad, I can’t talk long,” I said to my father when he phoned me last night.
I tucked the receiver between my shoulder and my ear and continued to
stir the sauce on the stove, “I’m in the middle of testing a new Beef
Stroganoff recipe for a piece I’m writing…it’s a shame you won’t be here to
have it.”
My father groaned in frustration. Like all American men in their
60s, his cardiologist has removed most of the ingredients of Beef Stroganoff
permanently from his diet.
“When your mother and I were first married,” he said longingly, “we had Beef
Stroganoff at least once a week…I loved it.” He sighed deeply, and added
in disgust, “now I’m only allowed lentil soup and sea bass.”
This got me thinking: my father was married during the height of America’s
anti-communist paranoia known as the “Red Scare.” How then, did this most
Russian of dishes end up as an immensely popular favorite at dinner parties
across the USA?
The answer takes us almost all the way around the world, and back to that
dish’s appearance at aristocratic Russian tables in the 18th Century. Beef Stroganoff’s origins are clearly French, and most culinary
historians, such as Darra Goldstein, author of “A Taste of Russia,” agree that
it was gourmet Count Pavel Stroganoff’s renowned French chef who adapted a
textbook French beef fricassee to the palate of his Russian employer by adding
sour cream, and christening the dish for the Count, in the accepted tradition
of the time, which married rich aristocrats with rich food: the tradition that
gave us Veal Orlov, and who knows, could eventually gift us “Ravioli
Abramovich” or “Goose Deripaska.” By the mid-19th Century,
Beef Stroganoff was firmly established, holding pride of place in the 1861
first edition of the classic Russian pre-revolutionary culinary bible, “A Gift
To Young Housewives,” by Elena Molokhovets.’ It made its way into L’Art
Culinaire in 1891, and shortly after into Larousse Gastronomique, where it has
remained.
The 1917 Revolution scattered Russia’s nobility and their traditions around the
world. From the White Russian community in Harbin, China, Beef Stroganoff was
adopted by local Chinese cooks, who removed the sour cream, spiced it up, and
served it over rice. From there, the recipe was exported by American
servicemen in the 1940s to the US, becoming firmly entrenched as a dinner party
staple until cholesterol replaced Communism as the demon stalking America.
In America, Beef Stroganoff is served over egg noodles, which is a good
idea, but the recipe was somewhat spoilt by the American passion for
time-saving devices which introduced an unfortunate mix of canned cream of
mushroom soup and Heinz ketchup as the sauce, rather than the original robust sour
cream, mustard, tomato and sautéed mushroom combination that had so won over
Count Pavel.
To rescue Beef Stroganoff, and complete the circumnavigation of the globe, we
take it back to Europe, restore the original ingredients, and serve it in the
traditional Russian way: to the accompaniment of sautéed potato straws and tart
cucumber pickles. Christopher Kimball in the March/April 2010 issue of
Cook’s Illustrated provided a number of helpful steps that both save time and enhance the flavor
or the meat and the sauce, and a version of this recipe follows:
Ingredients:
600 grams of sirloin steak tips, marinated in soy sauce or Worcestershire sauce
for one hour
400 grams of white mushrooms, quartered and sautéed in butter and white wine
1 tsp of dry mustard powder
1 tsp of sugar
Ground black pepper
1 tsp of vegetable oil
1 medium-sized onion chopped finely
2 tsp of tomato paste
4 tsp of unbleached flour
80 ml of white wine or dry vermouth
350 ml of beef stock
120 ml of sour cream
1 Tbls chopped parsley
To prepare:
1. Sauté the mushrooms in white wine and butter and set
aside.
2. Combine the mustard powder and sugar with 2 tsp of hot
water until it forms a paste
3. Skim a 30-inch sauté pan with the oil and heat until
smoking. Pat the marinated meat dry, and sear until brown on both sides.
Set aside
4. Add the onions, mushrooms, ground pepper and ½ teaspoon of
coarse sea salt and brown for 5 minutes. Add tomato paste and flour and
cook until vegetables are coated.
5. Add the bouillon, wine and mustard paste. Bring to a
simmer and scrape the bottom of the skillet to loosen browned bits.
6. Reduce heat and cook until sauce begins to thicken (5
minutes)
7. Slice cooked sirloin diagonally, approximately 7 ml thick.
Add meat and any juice to the sauce and cook until beef is warmed through.
8. Remove the skillet from the flame and allow to cool until
simmering stops. Add sour cream and 1 Tbls of wine. Serve garnished with
parsley.
Note: Classic Beef Stroganoff does not call for any additional spice, but I
take a leaf from the Chinese cooks, and add paprika or a dash of cayenne pepper
to give it a slightly more exciting flavor. Correct seasoning to your own
taste.
Serve with sautéed straw potatoes and pickled cucumbers, red wine, or, as Count
Pavel would: with a shot of icy cold vodka! Invite your father over
– only don’t tell his cardiologist!
Priyatonogo Appetita!
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