Stroganoff was named after an influential family named Stroganov. It was probably invented by French chefs who leaned into older Russian dishes. The first known recipe, “Beef a la Stroganov, with mustard,” appeared in a cookbook entitled A Gift to Young Housewives in 1871. Rather than strips of beef, it instructed applying a dry rub to cubes of beef.
The beef was then sauteed in butter and given a bath of a mustard roux. Stroganoff achieved some level of fame thanks to a French chef, Charles Briere. In 1891, the chef submitted a recipe for this dish to a magazine competition sponsored by L’Art Culinaire.
This recipe is for a rather traditional Stroganoff with mushroom gravy, only using chicken instead of beef.
Chicken with Peas Stroganoff
Ingredients
- ½ pound chicken breast
- 1 tablespoon vegetable or canola oil
- 1 large white onion
- 10 ounces of white mushrooms (sliced)
- 1 ¼ cup fresh peas
- 3 tablespoons salted butter
- 3 cups beef bone broth
- 1 tablespoon stone ground mustard
- ⅔ cup sour cream
- Salt and pepper to taste
Instructions
- Use a rolling pin to flatten the chicken to about 1/3# inch thick. A meat mallet works, too.
- Slice the chicken into ⅕” strips; cut long pieces in half
- Season lightly with salt and pepper
- Heat the oil in an iron skillet (high heat)
- Put the chicken into the pan and spread it so you can cook evenly
- Let it brown on both sides
- Turn the heat down to medium-high
- Add the butter and onions stirring until the butter melts
- Pour in the mushrooms, letting them fry until golden
- Slowly add flour and stir for 1 minute
- A little at a time, incorporate the broth
- Add the peas, sour cream, and mustard
- Let this simmer on a medium-low heat. The sauce should start thickening
- Once it’s the consistency you want, remove it from the stove
- Serve with egg noodles