Irish Boiled Dinner
Tonight was pumpkin carving night and that meant Irish dinner. Why? Because according to many sources the Irish brought us the Jack-o-lantern (and can really be thanked for much of Halloween, for that matter), and so to celebrate the roots of this season enjoyment we started our evening with Irish Boiled Dinner. The way my mom makes this feast is by boiling corned beef, but I tried a new recipe tonight and boiled fresh organic brisket in beer. I have to say, I'd rather have the corned beef and the beer on the side, and I disagree with the cooking times the original recipe listed, so I'll tell you what they said, and what I did. The recipe came from Cooks.com:
Put 2lb beef brisket in dutch oven; add two 12oz bottles of Lager beer, 2c water (or enough to cover meat), 2 bay leaves, 10 black peppercorns, 1/2c parsley, and 2t salt; start water.
In saucepan add 2T olive oil, 3 cloves garlic (sliced), 2c leeks (chopped), 1 md onion (sliced); sauté for a few minutes, then add to dutch oven.
Bring water mixture to a boil then reduce heat and simmer for 2-3 hours or until meat is tender. Meanwhile chopped your veggies to add later: 3/4lb carrots (cut in large pieces), 3/4lb red potatoes (peeled), 2lbs green cabbage (cut in sixths, leave part of the core in to keep leaves together). Add carrots and potatoes in last 25 minutes and cabbage in last 15 minutes. Remove from water and serve hot.
Notes: I already mentioned that next time I'll use corned beef and drink the beer. Also, I used more carrots and potatoes than they called for, and I think they're wrong on their cooking times, so next time I plan to cook my cabbage for 25 minutes and my other veggies for only 15.
March 17, 2009 - I made this again tonight using the following alterations - I used corned beef (yes, you can buy it organic), boiled it in water, and drank the beer. The cabbages and potatoes I added 35 minutes before the meat would be done, and the carrots only 15. The carrots could have used a little less time, perhaps, but otherwise this was delightful. Try it with Irish Soda bread - yum!