Subj : Brisket To : Ruth Haffly From : Dale Shipp Date : Thu Sep 22 2022 01:09:00 -=> On 09-20-22 15:23, Ruth Haffly <=- -=> spoke to Shawn Highfield about Prices <=- RH> Sounds good, we've got a brisket on the smoker right now. Got it on a RH> good mark down the other day as it was approaching the last day of RH> sale. It used to be that the Giant stores in Columbia area would have a summer sale on brisket. Full brisket price was under $3.00 per pound. We took advantage of that more than once. Then one one day near the end of the posted sale, almost all of the Giant stores said they were out of them. We went to one store asking for the sale price on brisket and showed him the advertisement. He went back into the depths of the meat market and came out with a brisket that he marked at $2.79 for us. It was a lot smaller than the full briskets we had gotten before. We then realized that it was the flat part only which were marked at $9 or more in the stores. We did not have that end part which has a fat part of two inches in the middle. That was a pretty good deal. Plus it was good eating as well. MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.05 Title: Pork Porkolt Categories: Pork, Stew, Hungarian Yield: 4 servings 3 tb Fat or oil 1 md Onion, chopped 4 Cloves garlic, chopped 1 lg Bell pepper (green or red, -no matter), chopped 1 lb Pork, cubed (shoulder is -good ) 3 tb Good Hungarian paprika 1 ts Salt -black pepper to taste 1 c Stewed tomatoes, with liquid -OR 1 1/2 c Chopped fresh tomatoes Heat fat in Dutch oven, add onion, garlic, and bell pepper. Stir and cook over medium heat just until onion is amber but not browned. Add pork and stir about, it is not necessary to brown the meat. Add paprika, salt, black pepper and stir to coat the meat with the paprika. With the lid off and without adding any more liquid, stir and simmer the pork (Gundel says this should be almost like "dry frying" the meat, but with the onion and stuff in there, it is still a low braise. After about ten minutes or so, add the tomatoes, stir, and cover. Simmer until meat is tender, stirring occasionally. Daves notes: 1. Get good Hungarian paprika, not that crappy red dust that McCormick and Durkee and the Dollar Store sell. 2. This isn't "real" porkolt because in the real recipe, the bell peppers are added near the end so they are just barely wilted. I hate peppers like that, so I add them at the beginning to cook into the sauce. 3. I like to take the cover off the pan for the last half hour or so to let the liquid in the pot simmer down to a thickened gravy, then eat the porkolt with a nice crusty bread to dip into the gravy. 4. Good with potatoes, rice, or noodles. We usually have it with rice because we usually have everything with rice. [g] From: Dave Sacerdote Date: 08-18-06 Cooking MMMMM .... Shipwrecked in Silver Spring, Maryland. 01:19:05, 22 Sep 2022 ___ Blue Wave/DOS v2.30 --- Maximus/NT 3.01 * Origin: Owl's Anchor (1:261/1466) .