Submitted by Simmyphila t3_10b64oh in Maine

I have been gone from Maine 22 years. And my mother used to make American Chop Suey how ever she passed before I could get the recipe. I know its tomato based and she put pepperoni in it. Just curious if anyone has a good recipe for it. Every place I have been outside of Maine calls it goulash bu its not the same. Thank you all in advance.

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csaw79 t1_j48eooa wrote

box of macaroni

1lb hamburger

1 can of tomato soup

1 can diced tomatoes

1/2 diced onion

1/2 green pepper diced

1/2 teaspoon garlic powder

brown the hamburger with the onions garlic and peppers. mix soup and diced tomatoes with meat and simmer on low. boil the macaroni and drain. stir the meat sauce together with the macaroni and season with salt and pepper to taste.

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LaChanz t1_j48flez wrote

Mines about the same except I add mushrooms and celery. And tomato paste or sauce instead of soup.

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csaw79 t1_j48jk3d wrote

I prefer the soup it gives a creamier texture but mushrooms are great

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raynedanser t1_j48so9u wrote

I add mushrooms, peppers and don't use pepperoni. Never have. And I also use sauce.

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spacechaser64 t1_j49s7v7 wrote

Oh My God

I never thought of using tomato soup. I usually use two cans of tomatoes

Oh, also, sweet and spicy Italian sausage. Not required but an excellent addition

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planningcalendar t1_j48z9kp wrote

This will give you a great start. Adapt it to what you like. I add cubes of cheddar cheese. But no green peppers

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nothankyou566 t1_j4bi3ka wrote

Why are we letting the guy that puts tomato soup in his chop suey be the top comment?

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csaw79 t1_j4bl2yj wrote

Don’t knock it till you try it

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FannyPunyUrdang t1_j4gt00h wrote

This is the one. Just like Unity Elementary Lunch Lady used to make.

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BorisGrishenko1985 t1_j48cjpt wrote

We grew up eating a very basic goulash which was: Ground beef A can of stewed tomatoes Macoroni Salt Pepper

There are different variations of goulash/american chop suey. Classic depression era type of food. Using pepperoni would be really good.

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BorisGrishenko1985 t1_j48coix wrote

My folks moved here from Ohio so I’m sure thats why we called it goulash. Lots of Hungarian influence out there.

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Alldamage t1_j48ijor wrote

Grew up in Maine. Mom grew up in Maine. Always called goulash. Didn’t know about American Chop Suey until I went to college in Mass. Funny how names change. Wonder if goulash lost its name due to sounding Russian, and the Soviet scare, like how Russian Salad dressing turning Thousand Island dressing

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IamSauerKraut t1_j492ktt wrote

My extended F-C family has been making ACS since shortly after some returned from serving in Korea. Long a staple among the older set; less so among the younger who think it is for poor people.

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sspif t1_j4ari9w wrote

Hungarians would fight you if they ever heard you call chop suey goulash.

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BorisGrishenko1985 t1_j4bjdxs wrote

Haha isn’t goulash a Hungarian dish?

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sspif t1_j4brbqt wrote

Yes, that’s the point. But actual goulash doesn’t resemble American chop suey at all. Not even a little bit.

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BorisGrishenko1985 t1_j4bvjbn wrote

Sorry to ruffle your Hungarian feathers. After a quick google search it seems that they aren’t that far off in some cases but assuming you are Hungarian I’ll roll with it.

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ambientpickles t1_j48h0yz wrote

My grandmother's basic recipe:

1lb ground beef

1 medium onion, diced

1 8oz can tomato paste

1 14.5oz can stewed tomatoes (chopped into smaller pieces)

1 box macaroni (1lb)

1 tbsp butter/margarine

Salt/Pepper/Italian spices to taste

Brown ground beef and onions, add tomato paste, stewed tomatoes, seasoning, butter and simmer. Cook macaroni according to box directions and mix with beef/tomato mixture.

These days, I usually add minced garlic/peppers/mushrooms and a couple different types of onion. Top with mozzarella and/or fresh parm.

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Chango-Acadia t1_j49kopw wrote

This one should be top. Paste and stewed tomatoes, not soup

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yyzda32 t1_j48k8fr wrote

I've done variations cooking the pasta in the beef suey, and other times pre-cooking. the one time I was impatient and did it pretty al dente, it came out just right.

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Alldamage t1_j48iq3y wrote

The one great thing about this meal, so long as you have Hamburg, macaroni and a tomato based sauce, all the other variations are accepted.

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man_with_a_horse t1_j49e3j5 wrote

This basic recipe is what I remember. But I am taking note of all the variations. Good stuff in this thread.

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eljefino t1_j49lcdq wrote

Make the basic recipe then put cheese and bread crumbs on top, and throw it in the oven for a little bit.

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gordielaboom t1_j49nspx wrote

Ok, my buddy’s dad, old County trapper, he fed us on this stuff our whole lives. He died a few years back, but sent me this in messenger and I’ve saved it for years. Here you go - one to guide ya, one to let you know we’re not far behind, Snuffy. “sorry for slow reply i just got new puter ant internet back......2 lbs hamburge 2 pounfs elbows....half orange size oion a green pepper ,,,,can black olivas... 2 cans tomato soup,,,, and preago of ur teaste ,,, i have leave out toad stools becuz mattt allerget to em,,,,get big pot and fry pan ... chopup oions and green peppers and black olives to teaste,,,fry tilll golden then put buger in fry that ,,, start elbows ,,, after drain addd soup and preago,,,, drain oil off buger add to elbows and soup ,,,, next step is to teaste ... affter all mixed good add 2 big table spoons of mircle whip more ore lesss to teaste ....if posable let set over nite reheat and serve ,,, i addd more marcle whip if needed,,,, small dish of cottage chesse and freash rolls or bread is nice too”

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z-eldapin t1_j4i8uqz wrote

Wait.. Miracle Whip???

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gordielaboom t1_j4i94em wrote

Apparently. All I know is there was always a huge stock pot in the fridge, and we’d just scoop out a bowl, microwave it, hit it with the seasoned salt, and chow down.

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200Dachshunds t1_j48kumc wrote

Here's our family recipe. I'm not sure where mom learned it from but shes been making it this way since she got married in the 70s. I make it the same way, it's a pure nostalgia bomb:

1 lb box of elbow macaroni

1 lb hamburger

1 15 oz can stewed tomatoes

1 small can tomato paste

1 small can tomato sauce

Butter, salt, pepper to taste

Cook pasta according to directions. Drain and add plenty of butter, salt and pepper. Cook hamburger, Drain fat. Add all tomato products to hamburger and heat thoroughly. Mix sauce in with pasta.

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one_paul_away t1_j48kya2 wrote

It always has to be elbow macaroni. It’s just not the same otherwise. For me, the other key is putting butter in with the beef. A classic comfort food.

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IamSauerKraut t1_j492q5z wrote

I always use butter to brown the burger. None of that olive oil stuff or margarine.

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sacredblasphemies t1_j48qqet wrote

If you're using jarred tomato sauce, I recommend Newman's Own Sockarooni Sauce. It works well in this.

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PMB00BIES t1_j4aeeeb wrote

Great recommendation. I love it for my spaghetti. Can't say I've used it myself for chop suey, but I definitely can see that working well here with it's vegetable-y vibe.

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MathematicianGlum880 t1_j48qypt wrote

I’ve made it several different ways. I have used ground beef, ground lamb, ground Turkey. Canned stewed tomatoes. My sister in law just made some yesterday for a get together with carrots and cabbage. In it. Which I am going to try next time. When I was growing up here in Maine in the 60’s my grandmother called it goulash. But I think goulash has corn in it.

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Simmyphila OP t1_j48rxfh wrote

I make a cabbage and Italian sausage soup that is wicked good with carrots and celery and tomatoes plus chicken broth. Also a few spices like basil and oregano thyme. and red pepper flakes.

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bugdude666 t1_j48vmia wrote

My family doesn’t really have a recipe, but here’s our process: Brown some ground beef, stick in some onions, celery, carrots, garlic, and diced tomatoes. Then add some canned termaters, oil, and a fuckload of pepper. When these are soft, add in elbow macaroni and mix. Simmer until the flavor can soak into the pasta then serve.

It’s a classic and absolutely fuckin slaps on a cold day.

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meowmix778 t1_j49rv3y wrote

Mine is a bit different than what folks here have but it's common from most people I've encountered.

1lb ground beef Beef broth (optional) maybe half a cup 2ish cloves garlic 1 green pepper 1 red pepper (optional) 1 medium yellow onion 1 tbs each dried oregano and basil 1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce 1 small can tomato paste 1 San marzano tomatoes (crushed or diced or whatever works too) 1 box elbow Mac

You'll start by dicing the peppers and onions. This will be like a sofrito for the sauce. Let this cook over a medium heat with oil for a 2 to 5 minutes until tender. Add garlic and cook for a few more minutes stirring occasionally.

Add your spices here. If you're feeling frisky add crushed red peppers. Add in your tomato paste and a splash of water so it's not thick anymore.

Here comes the tomatoes. Cook these down until it reduces just a bit. Taste for seasoning.

While this is going brown your beef. Salt and pepper to flavor. Drain any excess grease. Add the broth here and let it simmer for like a minute or two. Make sure you deglazed the pan here.

You'll add your worcestershire and beef to the sauce.

Salt the ever loving fuck out of your water and cook your noodles to the box.

Before draining reserve a mug of water. Add sauce to noodles. Stir these boys in and add some pasta water in as needed.

For optimal results, refrigerate immediately and serve as leftovers

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The_Shredz24 t1_j48ndm3 wrote

There’s a YouTube channel called Old Man Cooking, check it out, I grew up in Maine (now in Texas) and I think this is a great one.

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loki01 t1_j497zuv wrote

Same Maine to Texas, where do you live now? I’m in the Dallas area. About an hour north

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The_Shredz24 t1_j49qx9o wrote

I’m near Beaumont, down in the SE corner by Louisiana. What part of Maine are you from?

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loki01 t1_j4ofhdi wrote

I’m from the Bangor area. Lived in Glenburn for about 6 years. Family moved back up there

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The_Shredz24 t1_j4pm16s wrote

Oh nice! I’m from the Old Town area. Drove through Glenburn a few times last October, never seen so many deer an turkeys.

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lobstah t1_j48ojt3 wrote

I'm just here for the great recipes !

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jessendjames t1_j48zlyx wrote

I remember it as ground beef, onions, green pepper, garlic, together and then add a can of stewed tomatoes chopped up, and jar of tomato sauce. Elbow macaroni cooked, rinsed, then you add the good stuff to the pasta pot.

I made this once in college for a group of 25 people and forgot to drain the fat from an obscene amount of ground beef and just added stuff into the giant pot. No one noticed and I did not say anything.

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Ken-Popcorn t1_j492f41 wrote

I think you about nailed it. I’ll bet all that fat added a lot of flavor

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nochedetoro t1_j49doom wrote

I was once so drunk in college I mixed two cans of chili with a box of elbows and everyone raved about and demanded it every time we got drunk at my house after that.

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Jmtiner1 t1_j49h90v wrote

My family has always made it simple with cans of tomato soup, ground beef, finely diced onions, and macaroni.

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Magormgo t1_j4b50o9 wrote

Make a basic but hardy sauce: 1 onion, loosely diced I can tomato sauce 1 can diced tomatoes 1/2 can tomato paste Teaspoon Oregano Teaspoon basil Salt & pepper to taste

In a LARGE pot, add olive oil and cook onions until just browning.

Add other ingredients and bring to boil

Turn to low and simmer for a half hour

Brown 2lbs hamburger

Cook one box elbow macaroni

Mix everything together in large pot and continue cooking for 10 minutes

Salt and pepper to taste

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pLLanet t1_j48s0cq wrote

My mom made it pretty much the same as everybody else in this thread, but she added just a tiny pinch of baking soda to the tomatoes/sauce. It cuts the acid in the tomatoes a bit (and bubbles in a fun science fair way).

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YourMajesty14 t1_j48sisg wrote

My mom always made it with a pound of shell pasta, a pound of ground hamburger or ground Turkey, and a jar of prego. When I got married I learned that my husbands family makes it totally different - they also use the shells and the ground beef, but instead of prego, they use 2 cans of tomato soup, and a can of condensed cheddar cheese soup. I was very skeptical of this. It sounded gross. But he wanted me to make his family’s version for him. And to be honest - once you get over the weirdness of it - it’s pretty darn good!!!! I really don’t think you can go wrong making this. Even when it’s bad it’s still good.

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novatom1960 t1_j498n4m wrote

I’m our house we called it Goulash (or “Goulop” for slang).

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JimStencil t1_j499v63 wrote

This is a family recipe. It is the best chop suey ever, bit I'm partial. American Chop Suey

1 lbs ground beef 1 lbs ground sausage (we prefer hot) 1 green pepper - diced 1 onion - diced 4 cloves garlic 1 package mushrooms (optional) 1 26 oz can crushed tomatoes 1 16 oz can diced tomatoes 1 4 oz can tomato paste 1 tsp salt 1 tsp pepper 1 tsp garlic powder 1 tsp onion powder 1 tsp Italian seasonings Couple dashes hot sauce 1 lbs pasta (usually macaroni or ziti)

Bring a pot of water seasoned with salt to a boil and cook pasta until el dente - strain water.

In a second large pot brown the meat over medium heat.

When meat is about half done add the green pepper, onion, garlic and mushrooms.

When the veggies are soft, add the tomato paste, salt, pepper, italian seasoning, garlic and onion powder and combine.

Add the remaining tomatoes and stir together. Add the hot sauce. Simmer over low heat for 30 minutes.

Combine sauce with pasta, serve with fresh grated Parmesan.

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dahliarose926 t1_j49jh0n wrote

My husband's recipe. 1 pound Hamburg, 1 pound hot sausage, 1 bag small pepperoni, 1 medium onion, 1 green pepper, a package of sliced mushrooms, 1 can Rotel hot tomatoes/chili's, 1 large can tomato sauce.

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MrRevMaillet t1_j49lgcg wrote

I usually make the sauce homemade than mix noodles into the sauce which is

1 Onion 8 to16oz mushrooms 3 green peppers 4-5 tomatoes All is diced Cook Onion then green peppers then put mushrooms Add 1-2 lbs meat and put what ever spices you want Add elbow mini shells or medium

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SummerBirdsong t1_j49lpn1 wrote

My family just uses jarred spaghetti sauce, hamburger, and macaroni.

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the_squatch_m249 t1_j49x0vw wrote

My dad would make it and I hated it so much.

-A box of boiled elbows, no salt in the water

-Two cans of stewed tomatoes

-A pound of ground beef

-MAYBE a chopped up green pepper

That's it. 🤮

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Artvandelay2019 t1_j4arxzg wrote

He was missing flavor lol. Garlic, onion, peppers, actual pasta sauce, herbs, and cheese. Finish it off with some garlic bread.

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FredegarBolger910 t1_j4bd23y wrote

I remember that from UNH dining. I am originally from away and that is the only place I have had it. Sure it didn't hold a candle to the recipes here, but even the college dining services version was pretty good

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Maleficent-Beach7817 t1_j4lw626 wrote

Onion, green pepper (I like to use half bell pepper and half poblano), celery - chopped and sauteed. About a pound of hamburger sauted with a few good dashe of Worcestershire sauce. A can of stewed tomatoes plus a can of tomato sauce. Chili powder And, 4-5 slices of American cheese. (Oh yea, and don't forget the macaroni lol)

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acister t1_j490k2c wrote

Weird it's called Goulash in some places, it's kind of insulting to actual Goulash. It really is American Goulash (like American Chop Suey). You would never call American Chop Suey just Chop Suey (not throwing shade at it, I enjoy it but need to respect my Slavic roots).

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sspif t1_j4arnho wrote

Hungarians aren’t Slavs.

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acister t1_j4ativb wrote

Goulash is most famous for being Hungarian but it is enjoyed all over Europe (without macaroni). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goulash#Outside_Hungary

I was raised Polish and we ate it

Also Hungary is not Slavic but it's surrounded by Slavs and has A LOT of Slavs in the country with obvious history and influence (and vice versa)

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sspif t1_j4axt0j wrote

Ok, I’m not going to argue with you about it.

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_From_dust t1_j493u56 wrote

Cook everything in one pot, don’t boil the pasta separately. Makes a noticeable difference 👌

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mistercartmenes t1_j493x1s wrote

My mom is from Central America so our chop suey was always some sort of Chow Mein fused with Latin flavors.

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c30mob t1_j4gg7y1 wrote

my grandmothers recipe was always a hit, i just made some last night.

1lb hamburger

1 large onion

1lb elbow macaroni

1 very small can of hunts tomato sauce

1 small can campbells tomato soup

1 large can petite diced tomatoes

dash of red wine

salt and pepper to taste

celery seed to taste

garlic powder to taste

ground cinnamon to taste

very hardy dish. one of my favorite comfort foods

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marrymejojo t1_j48th3f wrote

The serious eats version is great.

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injulen t1_j495ms1 wrote

I'm really surprised nobody else here puts peas and diced carrots in theirs.. that's what makes it so good to me

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