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Corned Beef and Cabbage
Posted by: MountainMama Sat 25 Feb 2006 5:30 pm
Ingredients:
1 large corned beef brisket
2 or 3 cans of cheap beer
a couple of dried chiles, perhaps serranos
1 or 2 teaspoons coriander seeds
1 or 2 teaspoons mustard seeds
a few dashes cinnamon
a few dashes of allspice
3 or 4 large potatoes, scrubbed and chopped in quarters
5 or 6 carrots, coarsely sliced
3 or 4 turnips, scrubbed and sliced
1 large cabbage, coarsely chopped
1 lb mixed beans
Directions:
Buy a corned beef brisket at your local supermarket. In a pot, pour 12 ounces of
beer. Add a bay leaf or two, a dried red Chile or two, a teaspoon or two of
coriander seeds, a teaspoon or two of mustard seeds, a few dashes of cinnamon, a
few dashes of allspice, and all the juice from the corned beef pack. Put the
corned beef on a steamer rack in the pot and add water to bring the liquid level
up to the bottom of the rack.
Cover the pot and put it on some heat and bring the liquid to a boil. Steam for
several hours (it took me five hours for a 4 lb brisket) until the meat doesn't
feel rubbery when you stick a fork in it. Add water or beer or both as needed to
keep some liquid in the pot. [I usually steam the corned beef over night.]
Remove the meat and slice. Remove the steamer rack. [I just leave the meat in at
this point. It's in no condition to slice.] Leave all the other stuff in the pot
and put in some potatoes and carrots and turnips or whatever. Add water [or
beer] to cover and boil until the stuff is cooked. Remove all the vegetables and
potatoes. [I leave the potatoes, carrots and turnips in.] Put the steamer rack
back in and put in some cabbage wedges. Steam them for about five to ten
minutes, depending on how crisp or soggy you like cabbage. [I use 15 minutes.]
Serve.
Get out some beans which you have thoughtfully left soaking overnight in water
(I used white beans, red beans and black beans all mixed up). Drain them and put
them in a pot. Cover them with the liquid that you have been using to cook the
corned beef and cabbage and potatoes and vegetables. The liquid should be about
an inch higher than the beans. Simmer for three or four hours or until the beans
are as firm or as mushy as you like them. The beans will not be ready with the
rest of the meal but, you can eat them reheated the next day when the flavors
have had a chance to "marry".
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