Mulligan Stew

donna

Brev. Brig. Gen'l
Forum Host
Joined
May 12, 2010
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Now Florida but always a Kentuckian
Mulligan stew was dish prepared by hobos (homeless men ) in the early 1900s. It was also know as community stew. It was made at "hobo jungles / camps". Mulligan is also a term for any Irishman, thus the stew is also known as Irish stew. It consists of meat, potatoes and vegetables and any other foods that they added to it.

During the Depression years men stayed in a campsite known as an "hobo jungle. They would have campfire and a pot and all would contribute to pot to make their meals.

Mulligan Stew

One tablespoon of shortening, one pound of stew beef, one teaspoon of salt, ten ounces of tomato soup, two cans of water, three carrots, three potatoes, and two onions.

Recipe from:

"Old Time Recipes To Enjoy", "The Kentucky Explorer Magazine", March, 2018.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
The earliest type of Irish stew was made from mutton, onions, praties--the "lumber potato of famine infamy" salt and water. Full stop.

That's it. Carrots and vegetables came much later. I suspect that once upon a time it was merely mutton, salt, onions, and turnips.

Incidentally, there is a lowland Scottish concoction, which is a bit similar, called "stovies" after the Spanish word estofado meaning "stew."
 

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