Get a quick, reliable guide to making this tasty dish with straightforward instructions, pro tips, and flavor variations. Plus, learn the best ways to serve ...
Hungarian goulash, or gulyás, is what happens when simple ingredients get invited to a paprika party and nobody leaves early. It is not a thick, floury gravy situation. Traditional gulyás lives in that perfect middle zone between soup and stew, with a brick-red broth, tender beef, and vegetables that soak up all that smoky-sweet magic.
This version is weeknight realistic, but it still honors the real-deal method: onions cooked down until sweet, paprika added off the heat so it blooms without turning bitter, and a low, patient simmer that makes the beef go from “chewy” to “why are you so soft?”

