NEW ENGLAND BOILED DINNER
Provided by Emeril Lagasse
Categories main-dish
Time 4h
Yield 6 to 8 servings
Number Of Ingredients 14
Steps:
- In a large pot combine the meat, the spice bag and enough cold water to cover. Bring to a boil, reduce heat and simmer 2 hours. Add vegetables and salt and return to a simmer. Continue to simmer until fork-tender, 30 minutes to 1 hour longer.
- For the Horseradish Cream: In a small bowl combine sour cream and horseradish; season, to taste, with salt, pepper and hot sauce.
- To finish, remove corned beef to a carving board and slice against the grain. Transfer to a large, warmed, deep platter. Drain broth and reserve for soup, if desired. Arrange vegetables around meat and serve. Pass the horseradish cream for guests to help themselves.
NEW ENGLAND-STYLE HOME-CORNED BEEF AND CABBAGE RECIPE
Provided by markomni
Number Of Ingredients 13
Steps:
- CORNED BEEF: Combine salt, peppercorns, thyme, allspice, paprika, and bay leaves in bowl. Using metal skewer, poke about 30 holes on each side of brisket. Rub each side evenly with salt mixture. Place brisket in 2-gallon zipper-lock bag, forcing out as much air as possible. Place in 13x9-inch baking dish, cover with second, similar-size pan, and weight with 2 bricks or heavy cans of similar weight. Refrigerate 5 to 7 days, turning once a day. Rinse brisket and pat it dry. Place brisket in Dutch oven and cover brisket with water by 1 inch. Bring to boil over high heat, skimming any scum that rises to surface. Reduce heat to medium-low, cover, and simmer until skewer inserted in thickest part of brisket slides in and out with ease, 2 to 3 hours. Adjust oven rack to middle position and heat oven to 200 degrees. Transfer meat to large platter, ladle 1 cup cooking liquid over meat, cover with aluminum foil and place in oven to keep warm. VEGETABLES: Add carrots, potatoes, and rutabaga to Dutch oven and bring to a boil over high heat. Reduce heat to medium-low, cover, and simmer until vegetables begin to soften, about 7 minutes. Add cabbage, increase heat to high and return to boil. Reduce heat to medium-low, cover, and simmer until all vegetables are tender, 13 to 18 minutes. Meanwhile, remove meat from oven, transfer to carving board, and slice against grain into 1/4-inch slices. Return meat to platter. Transfer vegetables to meat platter, moisten with additional broth, and serve.
NEW ENGLAND STYLE BOILED CORNED BEEF & CABBAGE DINNER
From the Boar's Head Classic Recipes book. I think the Boar's Head brand is a must for the corned beef, the quality surpasses any other you can buy. The recipe calls for a Boar's Head 1st Cut Corned Beef Brisket
Provided by Gillian Spence
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 3h15m
Yield 6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 7
Steps:
- Place corned beef in uncovered Dutch oven, with spices up.
- Cover with 2 inches of cold water. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, cover, and allow to simmer slowly for 2 hours.
- Add vegetables and continue to simmer with lid on for 1 hour or until meat is fork tender and vegetables are done.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 797.6, Fat 43.5, SaturatedFat 14.5, Cholesterol 222.1, Sodium 2659.2, Carbohydrate 53.5, Fiber 10.6, Sugar 12.3, Protein 48.1
NEW ENGLAND BOILED DINNER (CORNED BEEF & CABBAGE)
Corned beef, cabbage, and other veggies--so good, not just on St. Patrick's Day. Really easy to do, the chopping is the most work, and while the corned beef simmers, you have plenty of time to take care of that. Adapted from It's All American Food, by David Rosengarten.
Provided by ciao4293
Categories Stew
Time 5h
Yield 5-6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Place corned beef in a large pot, cover with cold water.
- Bring to a simmer, simmer for 5 minutes, then remove and rinse meat, empty the water out of the pan.
- Place meat back in the pan along with the onion, garlic, the cloves, pickling spice and bay leaves.
- Cover with 12 cups cold water, or more to cover the meat.
- Bring back to a simmer, partially cover the pan, simmer for 3- 4 hours (adding more water as necessary to keep beef covered), until beef is tender, but not falling apart.
- Remove the beef from the pot, wrap in foil, and keep warm.
- Strain the cooking liquid, and add it back to the pot, discarding the onion and spices.
- Bring the liquid back to a simmer, and add the vegetables in this order-- (you should end up with all the veggies in the pot together) cabbage--give it about 4 minutes, then add turnips--give them about 5 minutes, then add carrots--give them about 3 minutes, and then add potatoes, simmering for about 10-15 more minutes.
- They should all be fork tender.
- David serves it this way--slice corned beef thinly against the grain, place in a shallow soup bowl with vegetables, and ladle about 1/2 cup stock over all, with mustard and/or horseradish on the side.
- We have it in dinner plates sliced, with our veggies on the side, and plenty of butter and salt and pepper on them.
- Also great with crusty bread, and maybe some mustard or horseradish on the side.
IRISH BOILED DINNER (CORNED BEEF)
Mouth watering tender corned beef with corned beef flavored potatoes, cabbage, and carrots. This is my great grandmothers recipe from Ireland. This was served with both Irish soda bread and corn bread at our house.
Provided by Ann Hester
Categories World Cuisine Recipes European UK and Ireland Irish
Time 6h
Yield 6
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- Rinse the beef brisket under cold water, and place in a large pot. Add enough water to cover the roast by 6 inches. Peel the onions, and place them in the pot with the roast. Bring to a boil, and cook for about 30 minutes at a rolling boil. Reduce heat to medium-low so that the water is at a gentle boil, cover, and cook for 3 1/2 hours.
- Remove the lid from the brisket. Remove onions, and cut into wedges. Return them to the pot. Add carrots to the pot, then place the cabbage over the roast. Place the potatoes on top of the cabbage. Place the lid back on the pot, and cook for another 30 minutes, until potatoes are tender. The potatoes should be immersed in the water by now, but if not, keep the lid on so they can steam.
- Remove the vegetables from the pot, and place in a separate serving bowl. Keep the corned beef in the pot until ready to slice and serve because it dries out quickly.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 918.2 calories, Carbohydrate 106.6 g, Cholesterol 178.6 mg, Fat 35.7 g, Fiber 24.2 g, Protein 47 g, SaturatedFat 11.9 g, Sodium 2247.6 mg, Sugar 25.3 g
NEW ENGLAND BOILED DINNER (CORNED BEEF)
From Cooking Light, Jan/Feb 2005. Store the extra vegetable cooking liquid in airtight containers in the freezer, if desired, and use it to flavor soups, sauces, or rice.
Provided by swissms
Categories European
Time 5h30m
Yield 8 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- Place beef in a large Dutch oven. Add black peppercorns, mustard seeds, cloves, allspice, and bay leaves. Cover with water to 2 inches above beef; bring to a boil. Reduce heat; partially cover, and simmer 2 hours or until beef is tender. Remove beef from pan.
- Strain cooking liquid through a sieve over a large bowl, reserving cooking liquid; discard solids. Place 1 larve heavy-duty zip-top plastic bag inside each of 2 bowls. Pour reserved cooking liquid into bags; stand 10 minutes (fat will rise to the top). Seal bags; carefully snip off 1 bottom corner of 1 bag. Drain liquid into pan, stopping before fat layer reahces the opening; discard fat. Repeat procedure with remaining bag.
- Add beef, carrot, rutabaga, parsnips, onions and potatoes to pan; bring to a boil over high heat. Reduce heat, and simmer 5 minutes. Arrange cabbage on top; cover, reduce heat, and simmer 15 minutes or until cabbage is tender.
- Remove beef from pan, and cut across grain into 16 slices. Strain vegetable mixture through a sieve over a large bowl, reserving vegetable mixture and cooking liquid. Place 1 cabbage wedge, 1 1/2 cup vegetable mixture and 2 beef slices into each of 8 large soup bowls. Pour 1/2 cup reserved cooking liquid over each serving; reserve remaining cooking liquid for another use.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 708.3, Fat 28.5, SaturatedFat 9.3, Cholesterol 138.8, Sodium 1691.6, Carbohydrate 80.5, Fiber 13.4, Sugar 13.5, Protein 35.5
HOMEMADE CORNED BEEF
"The reason to corn your own beef is flavor," said Michael Ruhlman, a chef and passionate advocate of the process. He wrote about it with Brian Polcyn in their book, "Charcuterie: The Craft of Salting, Smoking and Curing." "You can achieve tastes that aren't available in the mass produced versions," he said. Feel free to experiment with the "pickling spices" called for below - you can customize them, if you like, from a base of coriander seeds, black peppercorns and garlic - but please do not omit the curing salt, which gives the meat immense flavor in addition to a reddish hue. (It's perfectly safe, Mr. Ruhlman exhorts: "It's not a chemical additive. Most of the nitrates we eat come in vegetables!") Finally, if you want a traditional boiled dinner, slide quartered cabbage and some peeled carrots into the braise for the final hour or so of cooking. Or use the meat for Irish tacos.
Provided by Sam Sifton
Categories project, main course
Time P5DT3h
Yield 8 to 12 servings
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- Brine the brisket: In a medium pot set over high heat, combine about a gallon of water, the salt, the sugar, the garlic, 3 tablespoons pickling spices and the pink curing salt. Stir mixture as it heats until sugar and salt are dissolved, about 1 minute. Transfer liquid to a container large enough for the brine and the brisket, then refrigerate until liquid is cool.
- Place brisket in the cooled liquid and weigh the meat down with a plate so it is submerged. Cover container and place in the refrigerator for 5 days, or up to 7 days, turning every day or so.
- To cook brisket, remove it from the brine and rinse under cool water. Place in a pot just large enough to hold it and cover with one of the beers and one of the ginger beers. If you need more liquid to cover the meat, add enough of the other beer, and the other ginger beer, to do so. Add remaining 2 tablespoons pickling spices. Bring to a boil over high heat, then turn heat to low so liquid is barely simmering. Cover and let cook until you can easily insert a fork into the meat, about 3 hours, adding water along the way if needed to cover the brisket.
- Keep warm until serving, or let cool in the liquid and reheat when ready to eat, up to three or four days. Slice thinly and serve on sandwiches, in Irish tacos (see recipe) or with carrots and cabbage simmered until tender in the cooking liquid.
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