Current:Home > StocksHow to cook corned beef: A recipe (plus a history lesson) this St. Patrick's Day -Clarity Finance Guides
How to cook corned beef: A recipe (plus a history lesson) this St. Patrick's Day
Indexbit Exchange View
Date:2025-04-07 15:15:42
St. Patrick’s Day is approaching, meaning it’s almost time to don your best green suit, set a leprechaun trap and cook a festive Irish meal.
The holiday celebrates the patron saint of Ireland who, incidentally, wasn’t even Irish. Saint Patrick was born in Britain, taken prisoner by Irish raiders and held for six years before escaping. He eventually returned to Ireland as a missionary and became a symbol for a blend of traditional Irish culture and Christianity.
But what about the lore behind other St. Patrick’s Day symbols? Here’s a look at how corned beef became a purported Irish classic.
What is corned beef?
Corned beef is cured brisket, which means it’s been preserved in a salty brine. It’s similar to pastrami, which is also brined brisket, but corned beef is boiled while pastrami is smoked.
Corned beef gets its shining moment on St. Patrick’s Day as a “traditional” Irish food. Much like St. Patrick himself, however, corned beef is not technically Irish.
According to the History Channel, Irish immigrants in New York City learned about corned beef from their Jewish neighbors and adopted it instead of Irish bacon, a costly but traditional food. Cabbage got tacked onto the meal because it was abundant, cheap and bulked up the stew pot with other vegetables. The meal gained popularity in the New York bar scene because it was offered as a “free lunch” to Irish construction workers if they bought beers or shots of whiskey.
“I don’t know anybody who serves corned beef in Ireland on St. Patrick’s Day,” Myrtle Allen, the famed Irish chef often credited with “the revolution in Irish food,” told the Washington Post in 1996. Corned beef is “no more Irish than roast chicken,” she said.
The British Empire did extensively import corned beef from Ireland from the 17th to 19th centuries, when County Cork was known as the “capital of corned beef” according to The Irish Times.
However, a more typical Irish celebratory meal would be thick slabs of Irish bacon or another type of pork with mashed potatoes and vegetables served with a white sauce.
Why is it called corned beef?
The “corn” in corned beef has nothing to do with the yellow vegetable. It comes instead from the large salt crystals used to preserve the beef, which were sometimes called “kernels.”
How to cook corned beef and cabbage
Food Network recommends making the brine yourself with water, pickling spices (mustard seeds, peppercorns, cloves, allspice, juniper berries, bay leaves and red pepper flakes), sugar, kosher salt and pink curing salt. Pink curing salt is regular table salt with sodium nitrate and is used to preserve meats.
Bring the brine mixture to a boil and simmer until the sugar dissolves and let it cool. Pour the mixture into a bag with the brisket and seal it as tightly as possible. Leave it in the fridge for five to seven days, flipping it over every other day.
The meat can be cooked in a cast iron Dutch oven at a low temperature.
You can also save a few steps by making it in a pressure cooker. Buy a pre-seasoned beef brisket and rub it with brown sugar. Place it on a wire rack in your instant pot with garlic cloves and 1 ½ cans of beer and pressure cook it on high for 90 minutes.
When it’s done, add your veggies – carrots, cabbage, onions and potatoes – and the rest of the beer to the remaining liquid and pressure cook on high for 5 minutes.
When is St. Patrick's Day?When we celebrate in 2024 and why
Just Curious for more? We've got you covered.
USA TODAY is exploring the questions you and others ask every day. From "How do you play Euchre?" to "Who was Jack the Ripper?" to "How long does ground beef last in the fridge?" — we're striving to find answers to the most common questions you ask every day. Head to our Just Curious section to see what else we can answer for you.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Natalee Holloway Murderer Joran van der Sloot's Violent Crimes Explored in Chilling Doc
- 1 person killed and 10 injured when vehicle crashes into emergency room in Austin, Texas
- This SKIMS Satin Lace Dress Is the Best Slip I’ve Ever Worn as a Curvy Girl—Here's Exactly Why
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Activist sees ‘new beginning’ after Polish state TV apologizes for years of anti-LGBTQ propaganda
- What is income tax? What to know about how it works, different types and more
- Thousands of US Uber and Lyft drivers plan Valentine’s Day strikes
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Fortune 500 oil giant to pay $4 million for air pollution at New Mexico and Texas facilities
Ranking
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Jared Kushner, former Trump adviser, defends business dealings with Saudi Arabia
- Black cemeteries are being 'erased.' How advocates are fighting to save them
- Dolly Parton says to forgive singer Elle King after Grand Ole Opry performance
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Ticket prices to see Caitlin Clark go for NCAA women's scoring record near record levels
- Former NBA player Bryn Forbes arrested on family violence charge
- I felt like I was going to have a heart attack: Michigan woman won $500k from scratcher
Recommendation
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Judge to consider whether to remove District Attorney Fani Willis from Georgia election case
One Love, 11 Kids: A Guide to Bob Marley's Massive Family
Nick and Aaron Carter's sister Bobbie Jean Carter's cause of death revealed: Reports
Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
A Wyoming police officer is dead, shot while issuing warning
Oklahoma softball transfer Jordy Bahl suffers season-ending injury in debut with Nebraska
Hiker kills rabid coyote with bare hands following attack in Rhode Island