Shislers Cheese House
Menu   ≡ ╳
  • Home
  • Products
    • Cheese
    • Meats
    • Chocolate
    • Pickles & Peppers
    • Jams & Jellies
    • Gourmet Foods
    • Skinny Alternatives
    • Gift Boxes
    • Weekly Specials
  • Gift Card
  • Blog
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Cart

0
Menu   ≡ ╳
  • Home
  • Products
    • Cheese
    • Meats
    • Chocolate
    • Pickles & Peppers
    • Jams & Jellies
    • Gourmet Foods
    • Skinny Alternatives
    • Gift Boxes
    • Weekly Specials
  • Gift Card
  • Blog
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Cart

0
All

All

  • Holiday Season
  • Ocean Food
    • Roe
    • Shellfish
    • Fish
  • Butter & Eggs
    • Compound Butter
    • Cultured Butter
    • Whipped Butter
  • Dried Fruits
    • Plumsor
    • Raisins
    • Mango
  • Fast Food
    • Cheeseburger
    • Hamburger
  • Fresh Meat
    • Beef
    • Sheep's meat
  • Fruits
    • Apples
    • Pears
    • Citrus Fruits
  • Vegetables
    • Cabbage
    • Chard
    • Lettuce
  • Milk & Cream
    • Fat free
    • Low-fat milk
    • Whole milk

Search

Menu
  • Home
  • Products
    • Cheese
    • Meats
    • Chocolate
    • Pickles & Peppers
    • Jams & Jellies
    • Gourmet Foods
    • Skinny Alternatives
    • Gift Boxes
    • Weekly Specials
  • Gift Card
  • Blog
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
Shislers Cheese House

Cart

Home/Chicken Recipes

Tag: Chicken Recipes

Chicken Paprikash: Old-Fashioned Never Lost Its Touch!

By johnkassell / Date Jul 04.2016 / Category Favorite Recipes, The Shisler's Family

When 16th century explorers began sending new foods back from the Americas, it was as if a giant cornucopia had been emptied over Europe. Italy and Spain made tomatoes a staple of their cuisine, potatoes found a home in northern Europe and Turkey began raising and exporting red peppers, which the Hungarians found a perfect match for their soil and, eventually, their cuisine. The peppers’ odyssey eventually lead to Hungarian paprika and Hungarian paprika lead to one of the world’s great peasant dishes –Chicken Paprikash.

Chicken paprikash Pirospaprika

What is Chicken Paprikash?

“Paprikash” comes from the Hungarian word for paprika, and describes a range of stew-like dishes made with meat, onions, lots of paprika, and sour cream. Tomatoes are not found in the authentic Hungarian dish, which gets all of its red-orange hue from paprika, but you will hardly find a paprikash anywhere in American that does not include tomatoes. Though chicken seems to have been the original meat used in paprikash, lamb, pork and especially veal are also used, and mushrooms make a good meat substitute for vegetarian versions. Traditionally, Chicken Paprikash is served with dumplings, but wide noodles have now become equally common.

The History of Chicken Paprikash

Although it’s agreed that Chicken Praprikash is an authentic Hungarian dish that dates back several centuries, there are no precise details on when it entered the cuisine mainstream. My belief is that, unlike goulash, which was invented by trail herders on the move, Chicken Paprikash originated among the farmers of southern Hungary. This rich, sunny agricultural district supplied the peppers from which paprika is made, and two towns in the region – Kalocsa and Szeged – are known for their excellent paprika. The fact that this originated as a chicken dish also argues for its farm origins. Paprikash, like “coq au vin”, is a dish designed to use up older, tougher birds past their prime – a protein source always available on farms.

chicken paprikash drying peppers free use

It’s All About the Paprika

Paprikash is one of the few dishes in the world that takes its name from a spice – in this case, the spice that became the backbone of Hungarian cuisine. Originally imported from Turkey, the peppers that are dried and ground into paprika have been grown in southern Hungary for nearly 500 years.

In America, paprika comes in two varieties, sweet and hot. In Hungary, where growers and manufacturers blend paprika with the care of vintners blending grapes for wine, there are seven official gradations. From mildest and sweetest to the strongest and spiciest, they are:

  • Special Quality
  • Exquisite Delicate
  • Pungent Exquisite Delicate
  • Rose
  • Noble Sweet
  • Half-Sweet
  • Strong

If you want to make paprikash, goulash, or any other dish involving paprika and the jar you have has been sitting around for a year or so because you only use it as a garnish, leave the old stuff on the shelf and buy a fresh can of the high quality imported stuff. The taste difference is well worth the relatively small expense.

How To Make Chicken Paprikash

As I noted earlier, Chicken Paprikash can also be made with lamb, veal, pork, or with a medley of vegetables like mushrooms and carrots. It’s an easy dish to make no matter what meat you choose, and is made essentially the same way, whether you try the original Hungarian Chicken Paprikash recipe without tomatoes or the more familiar version with tomatoes (which Hungarians call Chicken Paprika Stew).

chicken paprish browning

To make Chicken Paprikash, begin by browning onions in a little oil, then add meat, brown, then reduce the heat and add paprika just to warm the spice. Add water or broth – and tomatoes if you’re using them – then cover the pot and left it simmer until the meat is fully cooked and tender.

The final touch is adding the sour cream just before serving. Here, I deviate from standing procedure a bit. To me, one of the joys of paprikash is the deep, jewel-like ruby-red color of the sauce. I like to let that shine. So I leave the sour cream out, ladle the paprikash over individual bowls of wide noodles, and finish each with a dollop of sour cream, which I’ve let warm to room temperature and stirred well so it won’t come off the spoon in a cold, unattractive lump.

For a final touch, garnish each bowl of paprikash with little chopped parsley and there you have it… the color of the flag of Hungary: red, white and green! Enjoy!

Let Shisler’s Cheese House help you create this succulent, dish with our supply of Paprikash Sauce from

RECIPE: Cheddar and Bacon Stuffed Chicken Breasts

By johnkassell / Date May 26.2016 / Category Favorite Recipes, The Shisler's Family

Cheddar and Bacon Stuffed Chicken Breasts

Cheddar-and-bacon-stuffed chicken breasts

So it’s about the end of the day at work and you’re struggling to come up with ideas of what to make for dinner. Not only that, but you also want to try to deviate away from the norm and let your taste buds reach a new level of extreme tastiness. Here is a recipe that will truly satisfy those taste buds without breaking the wallet and with simple, easy to find ingredients at the grocery store.

Cheddar and Bacon Stuffed Chicken Breasts combines the best of several worlds as it provides you with a serving of dairy, poultry and of course, bacon… because who doesn’t love bacon? This dish is a harmonization of cheese, bacon and chicken, a dish that you cannot go wrong with. This dish could be made for lunch or dinner as there really is no incorrect choice.

Cheddar-And-Bacon-Stuffed Chicken Breasts

Ingredients

1) 6 slices bacon
2) 2 boneless, skinless chicken breasts
3) Salt and pepper
4) 2 teaspoons Dijon mustard, if desired
5) 1/4 cup grated cheddar cheese

Preparation

Preheat oven to 300 degrees.

Cook bacon on stove in oven-safe skillet until cooked but not crisp. Transfer to a paper towel-lined plate.

Flatten chicken breasts to about 1/4- to 1/8-inch thickness, and lightly season with salt and pepper.

Spread a teaspoon of Dijon mustard on each chicken breast, if desired.

Lay three pieces of bacon on each chicken breast, and top the bacon with the cheddar cheese.

Roll up each chicken breast, being careful to keep the bacon and cheddar tucked inside, and secure each with toothpicks.

Place the chicken rollups back in the pan with bacon grease and cook on the stove over medium heat, turning frequently, just to brown all sides.

Transfer the pan to the oven, and bake for 25 to 30 minutes, until chicken is cooked through. Feel free to baste the chicken with some of the bacon grease while it’s baking. (I warned you this was not diet food.)

Serve hot, preferably with some of these pretzel rolls.

Cheddar-and-bacon-stuffed chicken breasts
Be sure to stop by Shisler’s Cheese House and let us help you get prepare this decadent dish with our supply of Streb Meats Smoked Bacon and Cheddar Cheese! Or, visit us online and order here!
Reviews: Here are what folks have to say about this particular dish…
“This is a huge hit with my family. Instead of making the filling myself, I use chives and onion cream cheese. I also flatten out chicken. I usually omit the salt and pepper. I also don’t fry the bacon first. The bacon gets fully cooked in the oven. If I want it crisper, I just pop it in the broiler for a few minutes.”
____________
“This was a great recipe. I have never wrapped chicken around the breast before baking, but it sounded good. I added some jalapeno peppers and mozzarella cheese to the cream cheese mixture and WOW!! It was wonderful!!”
_____________
“Made this for my family and they all came back for seconds. My hubby even said he did not know I was gourmet. It was so very, very good. I placed the finish chicken over noodles. Yummy”
_______________
“Wonderful! Even my kids loved this. I pounded the chicken breasts down with a mallet prior to stuffing them. And for the cream cheese mixture, I only put salt, pepper and garlic powder in it. I didn’t have any chives on hand. I also added some minced garlic on top of the chicken after I wrapped them in the bacon. Excellent! Can’t wait to serve this again!”

Recent Posts

  • Superbowl Snacks!
  • National Cheese Lovers’ Day
  • Valentine’s Day- A Brief History
  • A 2021 Virtual Comment Card
  • New Year’s Resolutions
  • Set Intentions of Kindness for a Bright New Year!
  • Still Waiting for Your Order? Let us Know!

Categories

  • Alcohol (22)
  • Bajed Goods (1)
  • Baked Goods (16)
  • Beer (7)
  • Bread (6)
  • Cheese Facts (82)
  • Cheese Glossary (17)
  • Cheese history (56)
  • Cheese Recipes (67)
  • Cheese Rind (37)
  • Cheese Use (79)
  • Cheeses (222)
  • Chocolate (24)
  • Daily diet (2)
  • Drinks (1)
  • Easter (3)
  • Fat (1)
  • Favorite Recipes (79)
  • Featured Products (8)
  • Festivals (11)
  • Friends of Shisler's Cheese House (14)
  • Health (11)
  • Healthy (1)
  • Healthy Eating / Weight Loss (29)
  • Healthy Mind (5)
  • Holidays (67)
  • Ireland (4)
  • Life Style (2)
  • Meats (9)
  • Media (5)
  • Nutrition (0)
  • Our Causes (2)
  • Parades (2)
  • Product Reviews (50)
  • Restaurant Reviews (4)
  • Seasonal (27)
  • Seasonal Gifts (18)
  • Skinny Alternatives (4)
  • Special (15)
  • Spirits (2)
  • St. Patrick's Day (4)
  • tequila (1)
  • The Shisler's Family (190)
  • Traditions (37)
  • Travel (1)
  • Uncategorized (61)
  • Vegan (2)
  • Wellness (2)
  • Wine (20)
  • Wordpress (1)

Top rated products

  • sponge candy
    Sponge Candy
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $3.49 – $8.49
  • Smoked Bacon
    Streb Meats Fresh Cut Smoked Bacon
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $11.39
  • Ghost Pepper Cheese
    Ghost Pepper Cheese
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $10.19
  • amish butter cheese
    Amish Butter Cheese
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $6.99
  • Lebanon Bologna
    Lebanon Bologna
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $7.99 – $10.69

Archives

Contact Info

Hotline Free 24/7:

330-682-2105

Shisler’s Cheese House, 55 Kidron Rd. Orrville, OH 44667.

Quick Links

Blog
Privacy Policy
Return Policy
Shipping Policy

About Us

Home
About Us
Contact Us
My Account

Sign up for exclusive news and offers

©2023 Shisler’s Cheese House. | Designed & Developed By : Ginger Domain