Kreplach #6 - meat
Posted by : BGL
Recipe By : David Rosengarten, "Taste" tv show
Serving Size : 8 Preparation Time :0:00
Categories : Jewish
Amount Measure Ingredient -- Preparation Method
-------- ------------ --------------------------------
2 cups unbleached white flour
2 eggs -- beaten
1 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons rendered chicken fat
2 medium onions -- chopped
2 firmly packed cups boiled beef cut into
slices (cooked flanken is best
but all leftover boiled or potted beef
will do)
1/4 teaspoon allspice
Salt and pepper to taste
Chicken soup -- store-bought or
homemade
Mix together the flour, eggs, and salt, as if making pasta. You will
probably need to add about 5 to 6 tablespoons of water to reach the desired
elasticity in the dough. Work it on a floured board, kneading for about 10
minutes. When it's smooth and elastic, pull it into something resembling a
square. Cover with plastic wrap and let sit at room temperature for about 20
minutes.
Place the chicken fat in a heavy saute pan over high heat. Add the onions
and saute until the onions are medium-brown, about 10 minutes. Place the
onions in the work bowl of a food processor, and add the sliced beef and
allspice. Puree until smooth. Taste, and season well with salt and pepper.
Roll out the kreplach dough into a large square, about 1/4-inch thick. Cut
into smaller squares, about 2-inches each. You should have about 24 squares.
Divide the beef mixture among them, placing a tablespoon or so of the beef
mixture on the center of each square. Triangular kreplach are traditional;
fold each square once to form a triangle, then pinch the edges with your
fingers. You could also make square or rectangular kreplach, depending on
how you fold and pinch.
To cook the kreplach, drop them in a pot of boiling chicken soup.
Traditionally, they are cooked for half an hour or so, until the noodle is
soft. An alternative, giving the noodle a more Italian bite, is to cook them
for 15 minutes. Serve the kreplach in soup, 3 to 4 to each bowl.
Note: Though it is traditional to serve these kreplach in chicken soup (3 to
4 per bowl), they can also make a terrific Jewish Apasta dish. For
authenticity's sake, you can't use dairy products in the sauce but a
thickened saute of mushrooms (in a vegetable oil, of course) would be a
great topping.
Yield: 24 kreplach
Drink: Seltzer
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Per serving: 23 Calories; 1g Fat (43% calories from fat); 2g Protein; 2g Carbohydrate; 45mg Cholesterol; 417mg Sodium
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