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Beef Kreplach

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Vegetables Jewish Appetizers 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

2 lb Boneless Chuck Or Brisket
Salt And Freshly Ground Pepper; To Taste
1 Clove Garlic
1 Carrott
1 Celery Stalk
3 md Onions
3 tb Vegetable Oil
1/4 c Vegetable Oil
2 ts Salt
1 c Lukewarm Water
4 c Flour

INSTRUCTIONS

MEAT FILLING
DOUGH
Season the meat with salt and pepper; rub with the garlic. Place in a
heaavy pot and surround with the carrot, celery an 1 onion. Cook covered
for about one hour or until there is almost no liquid. Add water to cover
and simmer for 1 1/2 hours. While the meat is cooking, slice the remaining
2 onions and saute slowly in oil until brown. Remove the meat from heat and
let cool. Drain and coarsely grind with all the onions, adding a little
broth from the meat if needed to make it moist enough to handle.
Dough: Mix the oil, salt and water in a bowl. Gradually stir in the flour
until a medium soft dough is formed. Place on a floured board. Knead until
the doughis smooth and soft. A food processor will work fine for this. Cut
the dough into 3 portions. Roll each piece into a rectable about 1/8 inch
thick. Cut into 2 inch squares.
Fill each square with about 1 tsp of the meat mixture. Dipping your hands
in flour, fold over into a triangle, and then crimp closed. Join the two
ends together like a little ring, as with tortellini or wontons. Repeat
with the rest of the kough. If you like, you can freeze the kreplach at
this point. Place on a cookie sheet in a single layer and freeze. Transfer
to plastic freezer bags. Otherwise, refrigerate until ready to use.
To cook the kreplach, bring about 10 cups of water to a boil in a big pot.
Add salt and about 20 kreplach at a time. When the kreplach have risen to
the top, cook for another 5 minutes (al dente). Remove with a strainer into
a bowl filled with chicken soup.
Recipe by: Jewish Cooking in America, Joan Nathan
Posted to JEWISH-FOOD digest by boxersrock@juno.com (Sheryl Donner) on Aug
30, 1998, converted by MM_Buster v2.0l.

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