I recently read
an interesting article about cooking corned beef. One thing it talked about was the high amount of connective tissue in this meat; that might be how it can survive brining that would otherwise reduce poultry to jello. The other thing that it mentioned was the huge amount of shrinkage of this particular cut... over 50%!
Chouxfly smoked two commercially brined 4.8 lb briskets for our dinner (a recipe mentioned elsewhere on this forum as "fauxstrami"); one was entirely devoured by six hungry adults and two kids, the other was sliced for sandwiches (and two lucky guests were allowed to take a few precious morsels home with them). The smoked cabbage — not so much of a success. I decided to do
smashed potatoes on the side, along with a traditional Irish soda bread (with caraway seeds), Guinness, and
a Guinness/chocolate ice cream (full disclosure: we wanted to make sure we had enough of the real thing for guests to drink, so I wound up using a bottle of
Lagunitas' Wilco Tango Foxtrot for the dessert. I also had to use a bar of Scharffenberger milk chocolate that had nibs in it, turned out great!).
“Assuredly it is a great accomplishment to be a novelist, but it is no mediocre glory to be a cook.” -- Alexandre Dumas
"I give you Chicago. It is no London and Harvard. It is not Paris and buttermilk. It is American in every chitling and sparerib. It is alive from tail to snout." -- H.L. Mencken