Soup is always on my mind when the cold winds blow. We are expecting the first below freezing temperatures tonight. To complicate our lives, our heating system is not working. We are managing to keep warm with our gas fireplace and may even light a wood fire in out kitchen fireplace. David is now down in the furnace room with the new parts. Hopefully we will have heat again soon. But soup restores all discomfort and warms the soul. This goulash soup was adapted from Kalyn’s Kitchen. David is still avoiding carbs so this combination of Ground Beef, Cabbage and Roasted Red Peppers fits perfectly into a Keto diet.
The changes I made to the recipe were to increase the ground beef and cabbage. I doubled the cabbage from two cups to four cups. I increased the ground beef from 1 pound to 1 1/2 pounds.
We enjoyed the warming goodness of this soups flavored with paprika, beef stock and tomatoes. The cornbread is a side dish that I enjoyed alone. It is Rosa’s Cornbread which is very rich and indulged in only in small slices.
GOULASH SOUP WITH RED PEPPERS AND CABBAGE (Adapted from Kalyn’s Kitchen)
- 2 onions, diced
- 2 tsp. finely minced garlic
- 1 T olive oil
- 2 T sweet Hungarian Paprika
- 1 T hot Hungarian Paprika
- 1/2 tsp. crushed caraway seed (optional)
- 4 cups homemade beef stock (or 3 cans, 14 oz. each)
- 3 cups roasted tomatoes or 2 cans (14.5 oz.) diced tomatoes
- 4 cups finely diced cabbage
- 1 1/2 lbs. lean ground beef (ground chuck is best)
- 1 jar (12 oz.) roasted red peppers, diced into 1 inch pieces
- Heat large heavy frying pan, add oil, and saute onions about 5 minutes, until barely starting to color. Add garlic and saute 2 minutes more, then add paprika (and caraway if using) and saute 1 minute more.
- Put onion/spice mixture into large soup pot. Deglaze pan with 1 cup of beef stock, then add that and rest of beef stock to soup pot. Add roasted tomatoes or canned tomatoes, cabbage and 2 cups water to soup pot and start to simmer.
- Brown ground beef in frying pan until quite brown, breaking into small pieces as it cooks. When browned add to soup pot. Let simmer on very low heat one hour. (Taste for seasoning and add more paprika if desired.
- After one hour, add diced red peppers and simmer about one hour more. Serve hot, garnished with sour cream. This freezes very well.
That sounds warm and comforting! Hope you get your furnace fixed! I spy fabric pumpkins :-).
Furnace fixed. My hubby is a genius. Love our fabric pumpkins because we bought them together.
Looks delicious! I know what I will be cooking this week. Stay warm!
You will love the soup Lynne!
I really love soups with cabbage, and this one looks fabulous! I like the mix of paprika powders. I wish I had all the ingredients for this because we’ve got a norther blowing right now!
Stay warm Mimi. Thanks for stopping by.
Looks like my kind of soup. Glad you got your furnace fixed. We just left Cary for possible snowflakes in VA tomorrow. Looking forward to seeing you on Thanksgiving!
Safe travels. See you on Thanksgiving!
Sorry bout your furnace woes, Penny…super bad timing. I had no idea you were getting this insane cold down there.
Soup weather for sure. I’m going to try this. I’m intrigued by the two paprikas.
Hello to David! Stay warn!!!
Jane
Heat back and running. Looks like you have lots of snow. Hi back to you and Al.
Love cabbage in soups and I always add more too:)
Thanks Monique. Glad you are back.
Made this today – cold here in Columbia, SC, so thought this would be perfect. It is delicious! Will be making this again!!
So glad you liked it Lynne! Feedback makes me happy. Stay warm. We are cold in NC also, but at least the heating system is back up.
Whats the difference between Hungarian Paprika and regular Paprika? If I don’t have the Hungarian type will the taste be lacking in flavor. Thanks
Hi Janet. Hungarian and regular paprika are interchangeable. Check out this link.https://www.thekitchn.com/whats-the-difference-hot-sweet-68134