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Corned Beef And Cabbage: Let's Do It Right!

Posted: 03/14/2012 9:52 am

Surprisingly, corned beef and cabbage is not an Irish tradition. It is an Irish-American tradition. Corned pork and cabbage is more common in the Emerald Isles, but Irish immigrants to the U.S. found beef more plentiful in their lower Manhattan ghettos where the butchers were mostly kosher and pork was verboten.

Traditional on St. Patrick's Day when everyone is Irish -- it is not served more often -- and my guess is that people just take it out of the wrapper and throw it in a pot with carrots, potatoes, cabbage and maybe some onions, and they feel they have met their obligation. But everything is soooooo salty, the meat is tough and fatty, and the veggies and potatoes are mushy.

Here's how to do the dish properly. If you have leftovers, make Rockin' Reuben Sandwiches, or Corned Beef Hash. But if you do it right, there won't be leftovers.

Makes. 6 servings (the meat shrinks quite a bit)
Preparation time. 10 minutes
Cooking time. 3 to 4 hours

Ingredients
1 (3 pound) slab of corned beef, preferably home made
2 tablespoons coarsely ground black pepper
2 tablespoons pickling spices, preferably home made
4 medium carrots, peeled and cut into 1" segments
2 pounds of potatoes, cleaned and cut into 2" chunks
1 small head of cabbage, outer leaves removed, cut in quarters

A good idea. While the meat is cooking, mix up some of my Secretariat Horseradish Sauce and refrigerate for at least two hours to let the flavors marry. Serve it on the side as a sauce.

Do this
1) Open the package the meat came in and dump out all the liquid. Rinse thoroughly. Trim off all the fat cap. If you have made your own corned beef, and you should, it is just plain better, remove it from the brine, and rinse it well.

2012-03-13-pickling_spice.jpg2) Corned beef is essentially pickled in salt, and straight out of the pack it is way too salty. Before we can eat this cured meat, we need to cook it and desalinate it a bit. Place the beef in a large pot along with enough hot water to cover it by at least 1" and put the lid on.

Turn the heat to medium and bring to a low simmer for 30 minutes. Do not let it boil. If you boil it, it will get tough and shrink. Beware that the meat is cold, so when it warms the water will slowly move from simmer to boil. Keep an eye on it and do not let it boil. After 30 minutes, dump out the water and cover the meat with fresh hot water. This time add the pickling spices.

Bring to a low simmer again, this time for 1 hour. Again dump the water and pickling spices and replace it with fresh hot water. Bring to a simmer and let it simmer for 1 hour. Add the carrots. After 30 minutes add the potatoes. After 10 minutes add the cabbage. After 15 minutes the cabbage will be done and so should everything else.

3) Remove the meat and place it on a carving board. There are often two horizontal muscles separated by a thick layer of fat. Separate them by sliding a knife through the fat. Carve and/or scrape off the fat layer. Carve the meat by cutting across the grain about the thickness of a pencil. Any thinner and it will fall apart, any thicker and it will be chewy.

5) Lift out the cabbage, potatoes and carrots and divide them into serving bowls. Place the meat in the bowl. Spoon some of the cooking liquid over them and serve. Happy Holiday!

2012-03-15-corned_beef_and_cabbage.jpg


Tell us how you make your corned beef and cabbage below.

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Surprisingly, corned beef and cabbage is not an Irish tradition. It is an Irish-American tradition. Corned pork and cabbage is more common in the Emerald Isles, but Irish immigrants to the U.S. found ...
Surprisingly, corned beef and cabbage is not an Irish tradition. It is an Irish-American tradition. Corned pork and cabbage is more common in the Emerald Isles, but Irish immigrants to the U.S. found ...
 
 
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12:33 PM on 03/17/2012
We take the corned beef drain & rinse. We make a topping of brown sugar and prepared mustard and rub on top of the brisket. Bake at 350 covered for about 3 hrs depending on size. It is always delicious, even those who thought they hated corned beef have loved it. We make colcannon and sweet & sour cabbage with it.
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hyaofcr
No laughing, no smiling & absolutely no having fun
12:57 PM on 03/17/2012
Sounds wonderful! I'm going to try it!
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holdin5aces
Land of the Endless Summer
12:23 PM on 03/16/2012
Lotta work for cheap salt pickled brisket. I rinse the meat, put it, a pound of unpeeled carrots, a quartered onion, and some peppercorns in a crock pot. Set on low in the morning and drink green beer all day. An hour before chow time, in goes quartered red potatoes. 20 minutes before the dinner bell, the cabbage goes in. You do not need a Gannt chart for this. Been making a similar horseradish sauce forever. Will try the milk deal to see if I like the thinner consistency. I like corned beef. Unlike many we have it 3-4 times a year. Though it can be hard to come by in mainstream grocery's off season.
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philliplojek
Irritating liberals one at a time.
08:45 AM on 03/18/2012
Are you saying the cabbage only takes 20 minutes to cook in a crock pot? Not on this planet.

I too have it many times a year. Since it's in cryovac, I get a case of point cuts (6-8). The butcher cuts me a good deal for buying in bulk.
09:56 PM on 03/15/2012
Sounds so good. I think I might have to do an Adoboloco version.
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hp blogger Craig "Meathead" Goldwyn
BBQ Whisperer/Hedonism Evangelist/AmazingRibs.com
09:09 AM on 03/16/2012
For the uninitiated, Adoboloco is a hot sauce. Let me know how it turns out!
08:15 PM on 03/16/2012
Will do for sure. I'll probably inject it and then slow smoke it. Have a great weekend.
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medicontheedge
big loud broad
04:07 AM on 03/15/2012
I have cooked up to 200 lbs of corned beef for my big St. Patrick's party. I only buy flat cut. Cook the corned beef ahead of time, like a day or two before. Take the briskets out of the pot, wrap and refrigerate. Strain the pot juices, and refrigerate that. The day of your dinner, the pot juices will have the fat in solids on top, skim this off, and heat the juices up. Cook your veggies in this, then remove them and keep warm. The fat trims easily from the cold meat, and it slices well, too. A quick swim in the hot juice heats the meat slices perfectly. Enjoy!
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hp blogger Craig "Meathead" Goldwyn
BBQ Whisperer/Hedonism Evangelist/AmazingRibs.com
11:01 AM on 03/15/2012
I'll remember this next time I'm cooking for an Irish crowd. Thanks!
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medicontheedge
big loud broad
07:31 PM on 03/15/2012
Cheers! This method works with any amount. Try it sometime!
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shastaman
11:22 PM on 03/14/2012
This sounds great but
once the beef is out of thye pot
slice into strips and glaze with honey orange sauce and broil til carmelized
also the taters and cabbage are steamed seperately and flavored with a buttered and horseradish sauce which is wonderous
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
hp blogger Craig "Meathead" Goldwyn
BBQ Whisperer/Hedonism Evangelist/AmazingRibs.com
11:02 AM on 03/15/2012
I shuddered at the thought of a sweet sauce, but sweet and salt is a great combo. Why not? Click the link above for my horsey sauce recipe.
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shastaman
11:20 AM on 03/15/2012
The orange concentrate for the glaze gives an intense tart sensation which i suppose is enhanced by the carmelizing when broiled
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pisedoff
Not gonna take it any more
10:58 PM on 03/14/2012
Did a point cut in a 300 oven in a porcelain dutch oven with 2 inches of water. 4# piece for 3.5 hours. Used pickling spice and granulated garlic. Soaked the beef in 3 changes of water with 1/2 hour between changes. After cooking corned beef in a pot for both restaurant use and several times a year at home, the oven method is the winner. Strained the broth, added 3 cups water to cook the potatoes, carrots, onion and cabbage next day. Put the meat on the pot with the veggies about 20 min. to heat. Great dinner, moist and flavorful corned beef which sliced beautifully in thicker slices.
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hp blogger Craig "Meathead" Goldwyn
BBQ Whisperer/Hedonism Evangelist/AmazingRibs.com
03:45 PM on 03/15/2012
I'll have to try the oven method.
04:24 PM on 03/14/2012
[I can't believe it, but I'm pretty sure the post below was not originally added because I used the full name of a certain faith, which is probably 'screened' due to geopolitical reasons...so now I'll abbreviate it]

What are the differences (ingredients & methodology) between 'Irish' corned beef & 'J-style' corned beef...like Manny's or Eisenberg (I know you're from Chicago!)??

Clearly, there's something; you can/should/MUST cut J-style Corned beef much thinner than Irish. It's 'denser', less crumbly.

I prefer J-style corned beef...so iffen I'm going to make my own, how would I do that?
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hp blogger Craig "Meathead" Goldwyn
BBQ Whisperer/Hedonism Evangelist/AmazingRibs.com
11:05 AM on 03/15/2012
I think the corning methods differ from producer to producer. Some soak in a brine, and some inject a brine, and some use a dry rub/cure. Most restaurants buy it rather than cure it themselves, even the famous delis, so I'm not sure there is an ethnic delineation so much as a supplier differentiation. Click the link above to learn how to make your own CB from scratch.
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03:22 PM on 03/14/2012
I put the seasoned corned beef from the package into a pot covering it with water and boil it for 1 hour then add quartered potatoes and wedged cabbage to the same pot and boil for another hour. The corned beef turns out very tender and the potatoes and cabbage pick up some of the spices from the meat. Hmm..I can't wait. Delicious and easy!
03:05 PM on 03/14/2012
What are the differences (ingredients & methodology) between 'Irish' corned beef & 'Jewish' corned beef...like Manny's or Eisenberg (I know you're from Chicago!)??

Clearly, there's something; you can/should/MUST cut Jewish Corned beef much thinner than Irish. It's 'denser', less crumbly.

I prefer Jewish...so iffen I'm going to make my own, how would I do that?
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Mindy Czech
Cindy's wife for life.
12:07 PM on 03/14/2012
I hate corned beef and cabbage. The only time I can ever sorta tolerate corned beef is in corned beef hash, and even then it's not that great.

Also, for some reason I read "Meathead" as "Methhead", and I wondered what crystal meth had to do with Jiggs dinner.
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camanokat
Outta this world
09:24 PM on 03/14/2012
LOL!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
hp blogger Craig "Meathead" Goldwyn
BBQ Whisperer/Hedonism Evangelist/AmazingRibs.com
11:10 AM on 03/15/2012
I smoked dope in college, but now I smoke pork.
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thtrmgr
compassionate misanthrope and idealistic cynic
11:37 AM on 03/14/2012
I make mine in a slow cooker with either white wine or beer and water--using turnips (less starch and they taste like potatoes after slow cooking), onions and a handful of carrots, the pickling spices and bay leaves. Cabbage is only added in the last hour or so of cooking. Tastes delicious and good all year and not just for St. Patty's Day.
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camanokat
Outta this world
09:26 PM on 03/14/2012
I do the same, but usually just water (no changing the water either) and I don't cut off the fat until serving. I like the way it flavors the veggies.