#stew
14 viral recipes tagged #stew.
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Tajine de poulet au citron confit et aux olives
Saffron-and-ginger-rubbed chicken braised slowly with preserved lemon, oil-cured olives, and a forest of coriander. The earthenware is optional — the technique is everything.
moroccanstewchicken -
Doro wat — ragoût de poulet éthiopien
Ethiopia's national dish and the centerpiece of every celebration: chicken slow-simmered in a deep, brick-red sauce of caramelized onions and berbere, enriched with spiced niter kibbeh butter, with whole eggs nestled in. Served on injera, scooped by hand.
ethiopianstewspicy -
Gumbo au poulet et à l'andouille
Louisiana in a pot: a deep, dark roux cooked the color of chocolate, the Cajun 'holy trinity' of onion, celery, and pepper, smoky andouille sausage, and chicken, simmered into a rich, soulful stew and served over rice. The roux is everything — and it cannot be rushed.
creolestewcomfort -
Rendang de bœuf
West Sumatra's masterpiece: beef simmered for hours in coconut milk and a fragrant spice paste until the liquid evaporates and the meat caramelizes in its own toasted, intensely savory coating. Often called the world's most delicious dish.
indonesianstewweekend -
Feijoada — ragoût brésilien de haricots noirs et porc
Brazil's national dish: black beans slow-cooked with an array of smoked and salted pork until thick and glossy, served with rice, sautéed collards, orange, and toasted farofa. A weekend feast that feeds a crowd.
brazilianstewweekend -
Bigos — choucroute mijotée à la polonaise
Poland's national stew: sauerkraut and fresh cabbage slow-cooked for hours with a mix of pork, smoked kielbasa and bacon, dried mushrooms, prunes and a hint of red wine. Deep, smoky and sour-savoury, bigos famously tastes better each time it's reheated — a true make-ahead winter classic.
polishstewpork -
Ghormeh sabzi — ragoût d'herbes persan
Iran's beloved national stew: a deep, dark green pot of slow-cooked herbs — parsley, cilantro, fenugreek and chives — with tender lamb, kidney beans and the unmistakable sour perfume of dried Persian limes (limoo amani). Ghormeh sabzi tastes of home to millions of Iranians; the secret is frying the mountain of herbs patiently until dark and fragrant, then a long, gentle simmer. Served over fluffy saffron rice.
persianlambstew -
Csirkepaprikás — poulet au paprika hongrois
Hungary's soul-warming chicken stew: chicken braised in a deeply paprika-stained sauce of onions and tomato, then finished with a swirl of sour cream into a glossy, russet gravy. Csirkepaprikás is built on good Hungarian paprika and the simplest of techniques, traditionally served with nokedli (little dumplings) to soak up every drop. Comfort food at its most generous.
hungarianchickenstew -
Khoresh-e fesenjan — ragoût persan aux noix et grenade
One of Persia's most regal stews: chicken (or duck, or meatballs) simmered slowly in a thick, dark sauce of finely ground toasted walnuts and tart-sweet pomegranate molasses until the oil rises and the flavour turns deep, nutty and luxuriously sour-sweet. Fesenjan is a dish for celebrations and Yalda nights — patient cooking that transforms humble walnuts into something velvety and unforgettable, served over saffron rice.
persianchickenstew -
Shiro wat — ragoût éthiopien épicé à la farine de pois chiche
The ultimate Ethiopian comfort food: a smooth, savoury stew made from shiro — finely milled, spiced chickpea (or broad bean) flour — simmered with onion, garlic, berbere and spiced butter into a rich, creamy, nourishing sauce. Shiro wat is everyday sustenance, fasting food (when made with oil), and a national favourite, scooped up with injera. Quick, humble and deeply flavourful, it proves that some of the best dishes are also the simplest.
ethiopianvegan-optionvegetarian -
Locro — ragoût argentin de maïs et haricots
The hearty, slow-simmered national stew of Argentina (and the Andes): white hominy corn and beans cooked for hours with squash, several cuts of pork and beef, chorizo and tripe until thick, creamy and deeply savoury. Locro is the dish of cold days and national holidays — above all May 25th and July 9th — ladled into bowls and crowned with a spicy quiajillo-and-paprika oil (salsa de grasa colorada). It's communal, warming, frugal cooking that turns humble ingredients into a feast.
argentineporkstew -
Kare-kare — ragoût philippin de queue de bœuf aux cacahuètes
The Philippines' grand peanut stew: oxtail (and often tripe) simmered for hours until fall-apart tender, then napped in a thick, savoury peanut sauce coloured golden with annatto, alongside eggplant, string beans, banana heart and bok choy. Kare-Kare is rich and gently sweet-nutty — and, crucially, served with a side of bagoong (salty fermented shrimp paste) that you stir in to taste, the salty-funky counterpoint that makes the dish sing. A centrepiece of Filipino fiestas and family feasts, it's pure celebration food.
filipinobeefpeanut -
Poulet et dumplings
This is old-fashioned chicken and dumplings: tender pulled chicken and soft vegetables suspended in a creamy, herb-flecked broth, crowned with pillowy drop dumplings that steam right on the surface of the stew. Browning bone-in thighs and stirring up a quick roux gives the sauce deep, savory body, while a splash of milk keeps it silky rather than heavy. Cook the dumplings covered and undisturbed and they come out fluffy on top and just-set underneath every single time.
comfort-foodamericanone-pot -
Ragoût Brunswick
Brunswick stew is the Southern barbecue joint classic: shredded chicken and smoky pulled pork simmered with tomatoes, corn, lima beans, and potatoes until the pot turns thick enough to hold a spoon upright. Poaching the chicken right in the stew base seasons the broth from the inside out, and a long, low final simmer lets the potatoes break down slightly to give the stew its signature spoonable, almost-porridge body. It is sweet, tangy, and smoky all at once — a full plate of barbecue in a single bowl.
southerncomfort-foodone-pot