Sperrgebiete: Die außergewöhnlichsten und verbotensten Orte der Welt
In einer Welt voller bekannter Reiseziele bleiben einige unglaubliche Orte für die meisten Menschen geheim und unerreichbar. Für diejenigen, die abenteuerlustig genug sind, um…
On the northern Croatian island of Krk, a plate of šurlice tells an entire story in flour and water. Long, hollow tubes of dough, curled around a knitting needle and left to dry on floured cloths, form one of the island’s signature foods and a culinary emblem for the broader Kvarner region. Simple ingredients anchor the pasta, yet the shaping work, carried out by hand at kitchen tables and in small taverns, signals care, patience, and local pride.
Šurlice belongs firmly to the home kitchen. The dough starts with flour, water, salt, and often a touch of egg and olive oil, then rests until supple enough to roll into ropes and cut into nuggets. Each small piece is pressed and rolled around a thin stick or knitting needle, then gently slipped off, leaving a hollow center that welcomes sauce. On Krk this method has become so closely tied to local identity that entire events, such as Šurlice Days in Vrbnik, celebrate the pasta with demonstrations and long tables of guests eating it in many forms.
The shape itself feels purpose-built for hearty food. Šurlice resemble a more slender cousin of Istrian fuži, yet stretch longer and carry a thicker wall of dough. That structure gives a pleasing bite—firm yet tender—and creates a kind of tunnel for sauce to run through. Meat ragùs and stews cling to the outer ridges while juices seep into the hollow interior, so every forkful delivers both starch and sauce in balance. On Krk, cooks often pair šurlice with lamb or beef stews, seafood braises, or seasonal vegetables, creating a bridge between inland comfort cooking and Adriatic brightness.
This recipe follows that tradition with a slow-cooked beef goulash, rich with onion, tomato, paprika, and red wine. The pairing reflects long ties between Croatian coastal cooking and Central European stews: plenty of onion cooked until sweet, moderate heat from paprika, and meat simmered until yielding but not falling apart. The resulting sauce tastes deep yet gentle, surrounding the hand-rolled pasta without overwhelming it. Lamb appears often in Krk kitchens for this dish, yet well-marbled beef chuck fits readily into many home pantries and responds generously to a slow simmer.
The making of šurlice rewards a steady pace rather than speed. After the dough rests, shaping turns into a quiet rhythm: roll, cut, press, twist around the stick, slide off, and dust with flour. In many homes the work becomes a social task, with several pairs of hands around the table, talking and rolling while trays fill with pale coils of pasta. At festivals and workshop-style tastings on Krk, visitors often watch this process in person, then sit down to plates of steaming pasta dressed with goulash or tomato sauce.
For a home kitchen far from the Adriatic, the same method relies on equipment that feels reassuringly modest: a bowl, a board, and a slim dowel, skewer, or knitting needle. The dough does not require a machine. The sauce calls for time on the stove rather than complex technique. The finished bowl, however, carries a quiet sense of feast—deeply flavored meat over handmade pasta, finished with a little sharp sheep cheese or pecorino and fresh parsley.
Prepared for a weekend gathering or a winter evening, šurlice with beef goulash invites diners into Krk’s food culture through texture and repetition: the chew of the pasta, the gloss of the sauce, the way each hollow tube captures just enough gravy. Once the method settles into hand memory, the dish can move from special project to recurring centerpiece, open to many regional variations—from seafood to spring vegetables—without losing its island character.
6
Portionen45
Minuten120
Minuten780
kcal60
MinutenThis recipe presents šurlice, the hand-rolled island pasta of Krk, paired with a slow-simmered beef goulash. A firm, elastic dough of flour, egg, water, and olive oil rests, then gets rolled around a slim stick to create long, hollow tubes that cook to a pleasantly chewy texture. While the dough relaxes, beef chuck stews with onion, tomato, paprika, and red wine until the meat turns tender and the sauce thickens, glossy and brick-red. The finished pasta absorbs the sauce both inside and out, so each strand carries meat, sweetness from long-cooked onions, and fragrant paprika. A final shower of grated sheep cheese or pecorino and a scatter of parsley lift the dish at the table. Though rooted in Krk’s festival and family cooking, the method suits any kitchen willing to devote a little time to rolling and simmering.
400 g (about 3 ¼ cups) all-purpose flour
Creates a firm, workable dough; bread flour yields a chewier bite, while “00” flour gives a silkier texture.
1 large egg, room temperature
Adds richness and structure to the dough.
1 large egg yolk, room temperature
Deepens color and flavor without adding too much extra moisture.
160–190 ml (⅔–¾ cup) lukewarm water
Hydrates the dough; exact amount varies with flour and humidity.
1 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil
Softens the dough slightly and contributes subtle fruitiness.
1 ½ tsp fine sea salt
Seasons the pasta from within.
Flour for dusting
Prevents sticking while rolling and shaping.
2 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil
For sautéing and gentle richness in the finished sauce.
800 g (about 1 ¾ lb) beef chuck, cut in 2–3 cm cubes
Well-marbled and suited to long simmering; shoulder or blade cuts work similarly.
450 g (about 1 lb) yellow onions, finely chopped
Forms the sweet, savory base of the goulash.
3 Knoblauchzehen, gehackt
Verleiht aromatische Tiefe.
2 EL Tomatenmark
Concentrates tomato flavor and helps the sauce cling to the pasta.
400 g (14 oz) canned crushed tomatoes
Provides body and gentle acidity; fire-roasted tomatoes add a light smokiness.
250 ml (1 cup) dry red wine
De-glazes the pan and contributes complexity; a medium-bodied Croatian-style or other Mediterranean red fits well.
500 ml (2 cups) beef stock, low sodium
Extends the braising liquid while keeping flavors balanced; vegetable stock works for a lighter profile.
2 tsp sweet paprika (Croatian, Hungarian, or Spanish)
Lends warm color and a gentle pepper note.
½ tsp smoked paprika (optional)
Adds a subtle smoky layer, especially pleasant if fire-roasted tomatoes are not used.
1 tsp dried rosemary, lightly crushed
Echoes herb notes common in regional goulash.
2 Lorbeerblätter
Give a background herbal aroma.
1–1 ½ tsp fine sea salt, plus more to taste
Seasons the sauce and meat.
½ tsp freshly ground black pepper, plus more to taste
Brings gentle heat and complexity.
45 g (about ½ cup) finely grated hard sheep cheese or pecorino
Echoes Krk’s sheep-cheese tradition; Parmesan can stand in if needed.
2–3 tbsp chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley
Adds color and freshness at the end.
Combine dry ingredients
Place the flour and 1 ½ tsp salt in a large mixing bowl and stir to distribute the salt evenly (2 minutes).
Add egg, yolk, and most of the water
Make a shallow well in the center, add the egg, yolk, olive oil, and about ⅔ of the water, then mix with a fork until a shaggy dough forms (3–4 minutes).
Knead to a firm, smooth dough
Turn the mixture onto a lightly floured surface and knead, adding small splashes of the remaining water only if the dough feels dry, until smooth, elastic, and quite firm (8–10 minutes).
Rest the dough
Shape the dough into a ball, wrap it in plastic or cover with an upturned bowl, and let it rest at room temperature while the goulash starts cooking (45–60 minutes).
Brown the beef
Warm 1 tbsp olive oil in a wide heavy pot over medium-high heat, add the beef in a single layer (in batches if needed), season lightly with salt and pepper, and brown on at least two sides; transfer browned pieces to a plate (10–15 minutes).
Cook the onions
Lower the heat to medium, add the remaining 1 tbsp olive oil and the chopped onions, scrape up browned bits from the pot, and cook until soft and golden, stirring often (12–15 minutes).
Add garlic, paprika, and tomato paste
Stir in the garlic, sweet paprika, smoked paprika if using, and tomato paste, and cook until fragrant and slightly darkened, stirring constantly (2–3 minutes).
Deglaze with wine
Pour in the red wine, scraping the bottom of the pot, and let it simmer until reduced by about half (4–6 minutes).
Build the braise
Return the browned beef and any collected juices to the pot, add the crushed tomatoes, beef stock, rosemary, bay leaves, and 1 tsp salt, then bring to a gentle simmer (5 minutes).
Simmer until tender
Cover the pot partially and cook at a very gentle simmer, stirring occasionally and adjusting heat as needed, until the beef turns tender and the sauce thickens to a spoon-coating consistency (60–80 minutes).
Divide and roll the dough
Uncover the rested dough, cut it into 4 equal pieces, keep 3 pieces covered, and roll the first piece into a rope about 1–1.5 cm thick (3–5 minutes).
Cut into small nuggets
Slice the rope into pieces about 2–3 cm long, dust them lightly with flour, and cover with a cloth while working (3 minutes).
Form the hollow pasta
Take one piece, flatten it slightly in the palm, place the floured dowel or needle along its length, then roll the dough around it with the other hand until it forms a uniform tube; slide the tube off gently and set it on a floured tray (10–15 minutes per quarter of dough).
Repeat with remaining dough
Work through the remaining pieces of that portion, then repeat with the other three quarters, keeping finished šurlice lightly floured and in a single layer so they do not stick (30–40 minutes).
Adjust the goulash
Taste the sauce, add salt and pepper as needed, and remove the bay leaves; if it seems too thick, loosen with a splash of stock or water, and if too loose, simmer uncovered for a few minutes (5–10 minutes).
Boil the pasta water
Bring a large pot of generously salted water to a rolling boil; aim for water that tastes pleasantly seasoned (10 minutes, overlapping with step 15).
Cook the šurlice
Shake excess flour from the pasta, add it to the boiling water, stir gently to prevent sticking, and cook until the tubes float and feel tender yet pleasantly chewy at the center (5–7 minutes).
Combine pasta and sauce
Use a slotted spoon to transfer the cooked šurlice directly into the simmering goulash, reserving some pasta water; toss gently, adding a ladle of pasta water if needed to loosen and gloss the sauce (3–4 minutes).
Fertigstellen und servieren
Stir in most of the grated cheese and parsley, leaving a little for garnish, then serve the pasta and beef goulash in warm bowls with extra cheese and parsley on top (2–3 minutes).
Approximate values for 1 of 6 servings, including pasta, goulash, and cheese garnish:
| Nährstoff | Amount per serving (approx.) |
|---|---|
| Kalorien | ~780 kcal |
| Kohlenhydrate | ~62 g |
| Protein | ~46 g |
| Gesamtfett | ~39 g |
| Faser | ~4 g |
| Natrium | ~900 mg (varies with stock and added salt) |
| Allergene | Wheat (gluten), egg, milk (cheese) |
Values derive from standard USDA ingredient data and will vary with specific brands, cuts of meat, and exact salt levels.
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