It's too late for St. Patties Day 2016, but it's great any time.  I got the 
recipe  from Melinda Lee.  The cooking directions work for raw corned beef you 
get from the store.  Most of the corned beef in the stores is precooked.

 CORNED BEEF FROM SCRATCH
 Including: Cooking Prepared Corned Beef
 Here’s the scoop for making corned beef yourself. (It’s easy, but it must 
“cure” in the refrigerator for several days, so you’ll want to start soon.) This
version will surely taste better than the store-bought kind, but, unless you 
use the optional “salt peter” (see below) it won’t be that bright red color
that you find in the supermarket kind. You may adjust the seasonings (except 
for the proportion of salt, since that is essential to the “cure”) to suit
your personal taste preferences, although, if you’ve never made this before, I 
suggest you try the recipe as written, then make changes in future versions.


The most common cut of meat for corned beef is a boneless beef brisket, which 
is divided into two pieces, and sold two ways: the first or “flat” cut, and
the “point” cut which is fattier and tastier, as well as more tender. If you 
decide on the point cut, you may have to ask for it – these days the leanest
cuts are the ones most commonly displayed.  Eye roasts and round roasts are 
also corned - but the result is dryer and less tender, more like the flat-cut
brisket. These leaner meat cuts slice the most neatly, though - so take your 
choice.
 For a 4-6-pound beef brisket or other cut (as above)

1/2 cup, kosher (coarse-grain) salt 1 tablespoon, black peppercorns - coarsely 
cracked 1 tablespoon, brown sugar 3/4 tablespoon, ground allspice 1 tablespoon,
dried thyme 1/2 tablespoon, paprika 2 bay leaves - crumbled 3 cloves, garlic - 
minced optional (for red color): 1 tablespoon, sodium nitrite* - dissolved
in 1/2 cup, warm water. [*sold in pharmacies or order from butcher shops]

[Vegetables, as desired to serve with corned beef – see last paragraph]
 Mix kosher salt with all other seasonings (but not saltpeter) in a small bowl. 
Pierce the brisket several times on each side with a skewer or heavy fork.
(NOTE: this piercing step may be eliminated if meat is cured for 10-14 days, 
instead of 5-7 days, before rinsing and cooking.)

Rub both sides of meat evenly with salt/spice mixture. Place meat in heavy, 
2-gallon size plastic zipper-lock bag, squeezing out as much air as possible
before closing bag. [Pour over dissolved saltpeter in water, if using, before 
sealing bag.] Place bag with meat in a pan large enough to hold it, cover
with another pan of similar size, and weight the top pan with two bricks, or 
with two heavy cans from the pantry.

Refrigerate for 5-7 days, turning bag once each day.

When ready to cook, remove corned beef from bag, and rinse the meat thoroughly 
under cold running water, to remove excess salt, and large spice pieces.
 Place the rinsed corned beef in a large, heavy pot, adding cold water to cover 
the meat by one inch, and bring water to a boil, skimming off any scum
that rises to the surface. When water begins to boil, immediately lower the 
heat, and cover the pot, carefully checking frequently to be sure that the
water only simmers (and never boils - which will toughen the meat). Simmer for 
about 3 hours, or until a skewer, inserted in the thickest part of the meat,
slides out easily. [An instant read thermometer, inserted in the deepest part 
of the brisket at its center, will read 200-210 degrees, when the tough 
connective
tissue has entirely gelatinized.] Allow the meat to cool in its liquid for at 
least 20 minutes. Flavor and texture get better as time goes by - making
this a day in advance (refrigerate after cooling) works beautifully,

*COOK'S NOTE: If vegetables are to be added, remove the meat to a baking pan, 
ladle some broth over it, and cover the pan, keeping it warm in a very low
oven, while cooking vegetables in the remaining broth in the pot. Simmer 
carrots, potatoes, onions and other firm vegetables (cut into pieces, as 
desired)
for 10 minutes in the broth, then add cabbage (cut in wedges) and continue to 
simmer until all vegetables are tender (about another 10 minutes).  Slice
the corned beef and serve on a platter, surrounded with the vegetables.
images/bp

-----Original Message-----
From: GARY WILLIAMS via Cookinginthedark [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, March 17, 2016 4:45 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: GARY WILLIAMS <[email protected]>
Subject: [CnD] Recipe needed

Hi,
I would love to have a good recipe for Corn Beef and Cabbage. Does anyone out 
there have one?
Thanks and Happy Saint Patti's day.
Nancy

Sent from my iPhone
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