The ultimate comfort food, this recipe for American Goulash is a one-pot favorite that uses a simple blend of ingredients to create a meal that’s loaded with flavor and puts lots of yummy in the tummy.
Packed with ground beef, noodles, onions, peppers and tomatoes, this dish will satisfy hungry appetites with everyone coming back for more.
What is American Goulash?
Sometimes you know it by its culinary cousin’s name – chili mac. Basically, American goulash is a dish with macaroni noodles, ground beef, and veggies in a delicious sauce. Chili mac will often have beans, whereas American goulash does not. Chili mac also has a distinct chili taste, while goulash features a very savory flavor brought out with simple seasonings to accentuate the flavors of the beef, tomatoes, and vegetables.
If you’re looking for a great chili mac recipe, be sure to check out our Instant Pot Easy Chili Mac.
Ingredients and Equipment
Our American goulash will have a base of 2 lbs. of lean ground beef (you can also use ground turkey), elbow macaroni, diced tomatoes, chopped onion, and green bell peppers.
The seasoning mixture will use Italian seasoning, paprika, garlic powder, kosher salt, and bay leaves.
The liquid will be low-sodium beef broth, a tablespoon of Worcestershire sauce, and the liquid from the cans of diced tomatoes.
We’ll also use some olive oil for sautéeing the onions and peppers and then some optional fresh chopped parsley to top things off when serving.
No Tomato Sauce?
Making American goulash with diced tomatoes, beef broth, and seasonings rather than tomato sauce can provide a more varied texture and a fresher tomato flavor. Diced tomatoes offer little bursts of juicy tomato in every bite, while beef broth adds a deeper meaty flavor as a liquid base that isn’t overpowered by the concentrated tomato presence in a sauce.
A One-Pot Recipe
Much like our One-Pot Pasta with Meat Sauce, this recipe is all cooked in one pot. No draining of the pasta is necessary!
A 6-quart Dutch oven is ideal for this recipe. The heavy construction is great for sautéeing the vegetables and browning the meat and the size allows plenty of room to work.
You can also use a stock pot or soup pot, as long as it’s at least 6-quarts in size to comfortably fit all the ingredients.
Preparation and Cooking
The only real prep you need to do is chop the onion and bell pepper. We’ll use a medium onion and pepper but really, whatever the size is acceptable. I like to chop them into larger-sized chunks for a heartier feel.
We’ll add the oil to the pot, place over medium heat and add the onion. We’ll sauté the onion for about 5 minutes before adding in the green pepper and sautéeing an additional 3-4 minutes. By this time the onions should be getting nice and golden and the pepper softening up. Then we’ll add in our dry seasonings and continue sautéeing for another minute. By adding the seasonings we’re “blooming” them and unlocking some fantastic flavors.
It’s now time for the ground beef to be added, which we’ll break up with a wooden spoon and cook for about 5-8 minutes or until browned.
After the beef is browned, pour in the cans of diced tomatoes (with the liquid), the Worcestershire sauce and add the bay leaves. Give it all a good stir. Bring it to a boil then reduce heat and simmer for about 15 minutes – no need to cover during this time. Stir everything every couple of minutes. That flavor profile is building and building and melding together to create an amazing taste.
Finally, after the 15-minute simmer, we add the broth and macaroni. Stir it all together and cover. Let it simmer for 15-20 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the noodles are tender.
Remove from heat, remove the bay leaves, and give everything a nice stir for about a minute. It will thicken a bit as it cools.
Serving and Toppings
Your goulash is now ready to serve! Ladle into bowls and let the feast begin.
Much like soup or chili, goulash is excellent for adding your favorite toppings!
Here’s some great topping ideas…
Cheese: A sprinkle of shredded cheese can get melty and gooey and OH so good!
Chopped Fresh Parsley: Provides adds a bright, slightly peppery, and herbaceous flavor.
Sour Cream: A spoonful of sour cream can add a tangy creaminess, balancing out the acidity of the tomatoes.
Bacon Bits: Crispy bacon bits can add a smoky, savory flavor that goes well with beef and tomato.
Hot Sauce: If you’re a fan of heat, your favorite hot sauce can give it an extra kick.
Green Onions or Chives: Sprinkling finely chopped green onions or chives adds an additional mild, oniony bite with a nice cool crunch.
Storage, Freezing and Reheating
American goulash is great on the reheat the next day! It’s a perfect dish to pack in some containers and reheat at work for lunch.
Store the goulash in individual serving, airtight containers in the fridge for up to 4 days or freeze for up to 4 months. When freezing, keep in mind that the noodles can get a little softer.
The microwave is ideal for reheating. If you’re starting with completely frozen goulash, use your microwave’s defrost function to thaw it partially. This is usually done by setting the microwave to defrost or 50% power. Defrost for a few minutes at a time, checking periodically and breaking apart any large chunks if possible.
Then microwave on full power in 1-minute increments until heated through. Usually 3-4 minutes. Add a splash of water to help thin it out and heat it through better.
PrintRecipe
Best Damn American Goulash
- Total Time: 45 minutes
- Yield: 6-8 servings
Description
American Goulash is a classic, cozy medley of ground beef, elbow pasta, and tomatoes, jazzed up with peppers and onions and tasty seasonings. It’s a simple, one-pot comfort dish that’s perfect for feeding hungry tummies.
Ingredients
- 1 tbs olive oil
- 1 medium yellow onion, chopped
- 1 green bell pepper, chopped
- 1 tbs Italian seasoning
- 1 tbs paprika
- 2 tsp garlic powder
- 2 tsp kosher or coarse salt
- 2 lbs lean ground beef or lean ground turkey
- 2 (15oz) cans diced tomatoes
- 1 tbs Worcestershire sauce
- 3 bay leaves
- 3 cups low-sodium beef broth
- 2 cups elbow macaroni
- 2 tbs fresh parsley, chopped (optional)
Instructions
- Place a large pot or Dutch oven over medium heat, and add oil. Add onion and cook, stirring occasionally, until tender and light golden brown, about 5-6 minutes. Stir in bell pepper and cook until tender, about 3-4 minutes. Reduce heat to low and add Italian seasoning, paprika, garlic powder and salt. Cook for 1 minute.
- Add ground beef, breaking up into small crumbs with a wooden spoon as it cooks. Cook for about 5-8 minutes until meat is cooked through and browned. Scrape bottom of pot of any stuck-on bits if there are any.
- Stir in diced tomatoes, Worcestershire sauce and bay leaves and bring to a boil over medium heat. Reduce heat and simmer for 15 minutes, uncovered, stirring often.
- Stir in broth and macaroni. Cover and simmer, stirring occasionally, until macaroni is tender, about 15 minutes. Remove bay leaves and serve, topped with parsley.
- Prep Time: 15 min
- Cook Time: 30 min
- Category: Dinner
- Method: Stovetop
- Cuisine: American
Ale Cat Swan
Excellent Recipe Jason, as usual. Perhaps I shouldn’t have made this modification, but my smoked paprika was singing to me, so I used 5/6th sweet Hungarian paprika and 1/6th smoked paprika. This ended up giving the dish a slightly peppery flavor I wasn’t expecting and there was no pepper in the dish! It was still good, but I wouldn’t do the smoked paprika again. Perhaps if I really wanted a smoky quality I would use some liquid smoke instead. There is only one thing I would recommend changing in the recipe – not enough green pepper. 1 isn’t enough make it 2! Also as an FYI use a wide enough pot that allows the meat to brown. I was at my in-law’s house so I had to use a narrower taller pot and the meat didn’t really brown but I don’t think it impacted the overall flavor that much. So readers, follow the directions except add a second green pepper. And make sure you have a nice wide pot so the meat browns
Joan
Made the goulash last night. Rave reviews from my hubby. Loved it!Definitely making it again.
Bskladan
I made this and added a sodium based beef broth as that was what I had on hand and it added some extra salt which did not hurt flavours at all. It was easy and delicious. I would recommend the recipe. Truly a perfect comfort food!!
Jenny
Comfort food at its best. I just made this wonderful goulash recipe! I halved the ingredients and it still made a large pot full. My only add was a 1/4 block of cream cheese stirred in before serving, making it a creamy version. A squirt of ketchup added just enough sweetness. This is now a favorite. Thanks Jason!
peggy J stivason
Hey there Jason , I made this just the other day and it’s wonderful and nutritious too ! Have a relax memorial day .
Bob Enerson
Simply excellent. Added mushrooms that were needing using.
Kat
Have enjoyed goulash since I was little. This recipe is fabulous! Love the beef broth, addition of peppers. Yummy!
Mary
OMGoodness! Absolutely perfect as is…no twerking needed!
Teri E
We added some leftover corn and got rave reviews at the table!
Lynne Seta
I love this. I grew up eating something similar, both grandmothers and my mom made it, but we called it Party Dish. My mom and her mom added corn, black olives, and used egg noodles instead of elbow macaroni. I suspect the corn and olives was done to “stretch” the servings. Still my all time favorite comfort food