Saturday, December 15, 2012

Corned Beef and Cabbage Soup

Corned Beef and Cabbage Soup



Corned Beef has nothing to do with corn, while it does relate to "grain." The link is to a grain of salt. "Corn is the Old English word for grain or pebble. Corned beef is salted beef and was a major commodity in 18th and 19th century trading between Ireland and England. Unfortunately, the Irish people did not benefit much because most of the beef was raised on land the English nobility had taken over in Ireland. As a child taken to the local butcher by my grandmother in a little town in outback Australia, I watched the corned beef being made as the butcher hand-pumped brine solution into the slabs of beef with a foot long needle. The end product was important at a time when there was little electricity and home refrigeration, and the non-perishable nature of salted meat made corned beef an important part of the diet. The corned meat also came in canned form such as Spam or "Bully Beef."

Ingredients


 2 1/2  pounds of corned beef. Chop the beef into 1 inch pieces. This should serve 8.

1 medium to large head of cabbage, cored and shredded.

2 large onions, diced

6-8 ribs of diced celery, include the leafy tops

1/2 cup of olive oil

6 cups of diced carrots

1 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon pepper

8 cups of chicken or beef broth

4 cups of cooked rice. The original Irish recipes probably used barley instead of rice so that is an option.

3 cans of 16 oz. diced Italian tomatoes

1/4 cup of Worcestershire Sauce

2 12 oz. bottles of beer. I prefer Guinness Stout.

If the corned beef brisket came with a packet of spices use them and reduce the spices listed above by half. The spices are basically pickling spices. Typically they include:

•8 allspice berries
•1 teaspoon black peppercorns
•2 bay leaves, crumbled
•2 fresh thyme sprigs or about 1/2 teaspoon dried leaf thyme


Heat the olive oil in the soup pot and add the onions and beef. Stir for five minutes and add every thing except the broth, stout and tomatoes. Stir for another five minutes and add the broth, stout beer and tomatoes. Slow-cook the soup for at least 30 minutes.

To make a complete meal, serve with substantive slices of garlic bread. See the garlic bread recipe in the previous posting.

In the Irish pubs I used to frequent in Boston and New York, this was often the "Friday Night Special" and was served with bread at the bar. No St. Patrick's Day bar celebration was held without Corned Beef and Cabbage Soup on the menu.












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