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Polish · Pork

Bigos (Hunters Stew)

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Bigos (Hunters Stew)

About this recipe

Polish cooking is built around hearty cool-weather ingredients — cabbage, root vegetables, smoked sausage, mushrooms, sour cream — and the time-honoured patience of slow-cooked stews and braised pierogi fillings.

As a pork dish, Bigos (Hunters Stew) works through the same fast-and-slow divide as other red meats — quick-seared chops vs slow-cooked shoulder — with the cut dictating the right cooking time and temperature.

Set your servings in the scaler above and every line of the recipe rewrites itself with smart fractions and unit promotion. Open Cook Mode to step through it hands-free with timers running.

Curated by the ScaleRecipe editorial teamReviewed

Recipe data is sourced from TheMealDB's open community database; ScaleRecipe handles the curation, the scaling math, the editorial commentary, and the conversion utilities woven into each page.

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Method

  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
  2. Heat a large pot over medium heat. Add the bacon and kielbasa; cook and stir until the bacon has rendered its fat and sausage is lightly browned. Use a slotted spoon to remove the meat and transfer to a large casserole or Dutch oven.
  3. Coat the cubes of pork lightly with flour and fry them in the bacon drippings over medium-high heat until golden brown. Use a slotted spoon to transfer the pork to the casserole. Add the garlic, onion, carrots, fresh mushrooms, cabbage and sauerkraut. Reduce heat to medium; cook and stir until the carrots are soft, about 10 minutes. Do not let the vegetables brown.
  4. Deglaze the pan by pouring in the red wine and stirring to loosen all of the bits of food and flour that are stuck to the bottom. Season with the bay leaf, basil, marjoram, paprika, salt, pepper, caraway seeds and cayenne pepper; cook for 1 minute.
  5. Mix in the dried mushrooms, hot pepper sauce, Worcestershire sauce, beef stock, tomato paste and tomatoes. Heat through just until boiling. Pour the vegetables and all of the liquid into the casserole dish with the meat. Cover with a lid.
  6. Bake in the preheated oven for 2 1/2 to 3 hours, until meat is very tender.

Cooking notes

When scaling protein-led dishes, weigh the meat rather than counting pieces, and remember that the pan size limits how much you can sear at once.

For volume-to-weight conversions of any ingredient — flour, sugar, butter, salts — use the ingredient converter. To translate the recipe's oven temperature between °C, °F and gas mark, see the temperature converter.

When you scale this recipe up or down, remember that cooking time does not scale linearly. A doubled cake takes longer, but not twice as long; a doubled soup takes roughly twice as long. The cooking-time guide gives sensible starting estimates by dish geometry.

Scaling notes

Scaling Bigos (Hunters Stew)

Bigos (Hunters Stew) is written for around four servings as it stands on this page — scaling it up for a party or down for a meal-for-one is the small math problem most home cooks face every week. Here's how this particular dish responds to scaling, what changes linearly, and what doesn't.

Pork shares scaling rules with beef — braising time is collagen-driven and mass-independent, while quick-cook methods like searing scale by the piece. Bigos (Hunters Stew) benefits from weight-based ingredient measurement when scaled up: pork roasts in particular vary significantly in actual yield, and a recipe written for "2 lb shoulder" can mean anything from 800 g to 1.1 kg of cooked meat.

When you scale the flour in this recipe, weigh it in grams if you can — a cup of flour can weigh anywhere from 113 g to 150 g depending on how you measure. The ScaleRecipe ingredient converter uses the King Arthur Baking reference of 120 g/cup for all-purpose flour, which is the same standard most modern baking books assume.

Skip the math entirely — ScaleRecipe's scaler rewrites every ingredient line above with proper culinary fractions and smart unit promotion the moment you change the serving count. Open the scaler →

Beyond the recipe

Substitutions & make-ahead — Bigos (Hunters Stew)

Two things home cooks ask about most when they're outside the recipe's exact assumptions: what swaps work for which ingredients, and how the dish behaves when you make it ahead. Both depend on what Bigos (Hunters Stew) is doing structurally — here's the practical version.

Substitution ideas

Cooking wine

Broth + 1 tbsp white wine vinegar or lemon juice per cup reproduces the acidic backbone. White grape juice for white-wine recipes; pomegranate or red grape juice for red. Non-alcoholic wines work directly but flavour varies wildly between brands — taste before committing.

Bacon

For the smoky-savoury layer: ½ tsp smoked paprika + 1 tbsp olive oil approximates the bacon backbone in soups and stews. For texture, pancetta, smoked turkey, or a quality vegan bacon brand. Maillard browning is the hardest to fake — no fat-free option matches the crisp.

For weight-based swaps and arbitrary quantities, the ingredient density converter and the cup-to-grams chart cover most pantry staples.

Make-ahead and storage

Pork shoulder and slow-cooked pork dishes (Bigos (Hunters Stew) included if it falls in that family) improve overnight as the fat redistributes and flavours integrate. Cured pork — bacon, ham, sausage — keeps well refrigerated but loses its crisp edges in storage; re-crisp in a hot skillet or under the broiler. Quick-cooked pork chops are best served the day they're cooked; the meat tightens and dries through the refrigerate-and-reheat cycle.

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Bigos (Hunters Stew)

Go deeper

Where this recipe sits in the wider tradition.

Each guide below is a real essay on the cuisine or the category — pillars, staples, techniques worth learning — paired with a curated grid of recipes filed under it.

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