Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
My niece is making her first corned beef. The meat case had flat, point and round. I know the flat and point are known brisket sections. I never heard round described as part of the brisket, rather they pickled another meat cut. Is is possible round is part of the brisket? (I don't think so, but then again, I could be wrong.)
She did buy the round, because she couldn't reach me when she was shopping.
Regards,
G Wiv wrote: Its all good though, its all good.
*With the exception of AP Deli on Wabash.
atomicman wrote:Berkots is a small grocery chain(8-9 locations) with a well regarded meat department out here in Will County. They were advertising Extra lean corned beef from the eye of the round this week as one of their St Pats offerings.
razbry wrote:Once again, my corned beef turned out excellent, but the veggies & potatoes were terrible. I threw everything into a crockpot and added a beer, water, pickling spices, etc. The veggies and potatoes picked up a bitter taste from the beer. I'm just going to have to cook the veggies separate from now on! One more year of learning.
Cathy2 wrote:I simmer the corned beef until it is tender. I take it out to rest in the oven. Only then do I use the cooking water to cook the potatoes, carrots and cabbage. I start the potatoes and carrots first, then add the cabbage a few minutes later.
Cooking the veggies all day with the meat is more time than they need.
Regards,
Cathy2 wrote:cito,
Was there a significant difference in the meat's volume after pressure cooking? Or did the low pressure cooking mitigate this affect by not so high temperatures?
Regards,
cito wrote:I took my 5.8 lb. Excel flat ( Thanks G WIV ) and threw it into the pressure cooker. After coming to full pressure, I reduced the heat to a slow simmer for 2 hours. Removed brisket from the pot (foiled it to keep warm), added Titleist-sized new potatoes and baby carrots to the CB water--- brought it back to pressure and cooked for 5 minutes.
No muss, no fuss and totally delicious.
Thanks again to Gary, the Excel brisket was probably the most flavorful and least salty CB brisket that I have made in years.
razbry wrote:Once again, my corned beef turned out excellent, but the veggies & potatoes were terrible. I threw everything into a crockpot and added a beer, water, pickling spices, etc. The veggies and potatoes picked up a bitter taste from the beer. I'm just going to have to cook the veggies separate from now on! One more year of learning.
j r wrote:Can some one tell me the difference between Kosher style corned beef and Irish style corned beef?
razbry wrote:I did a flat cut earlier this week. It was OK, but too lean for my tastes. I LIKE FAT! I took the leftovers and made corned beef hash for today. I liked this more than the main event.
LAZ wrote:j r wrote:Can some one tell me the difference between Kosher style corned beef and Irish style corned beef?
According to Ken Harrington, king of Irish corned beef in Chicago, "the Irish took the seasoning out."