Monthly Archives: March 2014

Corned Beef and Cabbage

Corned Beef

In honor of the fast approaching St. Patrick’s Day, here’s my recipe for corned beef and cabbage. I like to serve it in a bowl with some of the broth it’s cooked in, and with plenty of other vegetables added, especially root vegetables like carrots, turnips, parsnips, and potatoes. So it’s more like a corned beef and cabbage soup or stew. A Black and Tan (pale ale with Guinness Stout on top) makes a fine accompaniment.

I used a 4 lb. brisket of corned beef, which should serve about 4 people with leftovers.

Ingredients:

  • 1 Corned beef brisket, about 4 lbs.
  • 1 head of cabbage
  • 2 medium onions
  • 4-5 cloves of garlic
  • 2-3 ribs of celery
  • 2 medium-sized carrots
  • 2 medium-sized parsnips (optional)
  • 1 largish turnip (optional)
  • 4 medium-large potatoes
  • 2 tablespoons whole black peppercorns
  • 1-2 Bay Leaves

 

Corned Beef in PotAdd the corned beef brisket to a large pot and fill with enough water to just cover the brisket. If the brisket came with a little pack of pickling spices, add them to the water along with the bay leaves, peppercorns, and coarsely chopped garlic. Bring the water to a boil, then turn down to a simmer. It’ll cook for about 3 hours total.

Wash and peel whatever combination of carrots, parsnips and turnips you’re adding and coarsely chop them up along with the onions and celery. Add these vegetables to the simmering water and corned beef after it’s been cooking for about 2 hours.

Peel the potatoes if you like and chop them into 1 or 2 inch chunks (I usually don’t peel the potatoes because I like the potato skins- I just wash the outside skin really well). Wash the cabbage head and remove the outside leaves. Cut the cabbage head into quarters and cut the stem out of the cabbage. Add the potatoes to the simmering water at about 2 1/2 hours of cooking time, and add the cabbage on top.

Let simmer for about another 1/2 hour until the potatoes are soft and the cabbage is well cooked. Remove the corned beef, cut slices against the grain and serve in a bowl with some of the broth and the vegetables. Enjoy!

Bonus: how to make the Black and Tan in the picture:

Start with a good Irish pale ale- I like Bass Ale for this. Fill a glass half full of pale ale. Then take a large spoon and hold it upside-down over the glass. Carefully and slowly pour Guinness Stout (the only real choice for the “black” part of the Black and Tan) over the spoon so it layers on top of the Pale Ale. Enjoy (responsibly)!

 

Shrimp Jambalaya

Shrimp Jambalaya(Jambalaya aux Chevrettes)

A few weeks ago I posted a recipe, Gumbo Filé, from the ‘Picayune Creole Cook Book‘ and said I’d try more recipes from this historical New Orleans cookbook. Here’s another, just in time for Mardi Gras (or for Lent, because as the recipe says, if on Friday and you do not eat meat, you can substitute ‘oyster water’ in place of broth. Or in our case, bottled clam juice in place of broth, because you probably won’t be able to get a hold of enough oyster water. I discussed not being quite sure what ‘oyster water’ even is in the Gumbo Filé post).

So here’s what I did differently this time in this recipe from the Picayune recipe:

First, 80 lake shrimp in the Picayune recipe? 80?? I’m not even exactly sure what New Orleans lake shrimp are. Maybe they’re very small shrimp. The cookbook mentions river and lake shrimp, and says that river shrimp are smaller and more delicate than the lake shrimp. But how much larger New Orleans lake shrimp actually may be, I have no idea. anyway, 80? I used 20 jumbo shrimp for my recipe, which was fine for serving 4.

The Picayune recipe calls for cooking the shrimp for waaaayyy longer than I ever heard of doing– first it says to boil the shrimp according to another recipe in the book, then to cook the shrimp for another 45 minutes along with the rice in the jambalaya. I think this must be a difference in basic philosophy in how to cook shrimp between the day the Picayune book was written and these days. I have no idea what you’d even be left with, shrimp-wise, after boiling the shrimp, then further cooking for 45 minutes. Maybe that’s why the Picayune starts with 80 shrimp– perhaps they shrink down to little rubbery calamari-like bits. I cooked the shrimp the way it’s usually done these days, by adding it just a few minutes before the jambalaya is done.

This recipe, which you can follow on page 163 of the Google Books copy of the 6th edition of the Picayune Creole Cook Book if you want to see the original instructions, calls for cooking the rice with the Jambalaya, but I cooked it separately as in the Gumbo Filé recipe, because rice cooked with the jamablaya will keep absorbing liquid and quickly turn mushy, especially the next day if you have leftovers.

Finally, I went ahead and added a few more ingredients I’m used to with meal like this, like bell pepper and celery to make the veggie trinity along with the onion, and a little oregano.

Ingredients from the Picayune Creole Cook Book:

  • 1 1/2 Cups of Rice
  • 3 Tomatoes
  • 80 Lake Shrimp
  • 2 Onions
  • Cayenne to Taste
  • 1 Tablespoonful Butter
  • 1 Tablespoonful Flour
  • 1/2 Teaspoonful of Chili Pepper
  • Salt
  • Pepper
  • 2 Cloves of Garlic
  • 2 Sprigs each of Thyme and Bay Leaf

(I think the last ingredient listing meant 2 sprigs each of thyme and parsley, plus bay leaf, because the recipe directions mention adding chopped thyme, parsley and bay leaf)

Ingredients I used:

  • 1 1/2 Cups of Rice
  • 1 15 oz. can diced tomatoes
  • 20 Jumbo Shrimp
  • 1 Large Onion
  • 1 Bell Pepper
  • 2 Stalks Celery
  • Cayenne to Taste
  • 1 Tablespoon Butter
  • 1 Tablespoon Flour
  • 1 Quart Chicken Stock (or bottled clam juice)
  • 1/2 Teaspoon Chili Pepper
  • Salt
  • Pepper
  • 4 Cloves of Garlic
  • 2 Sprigs Thyme
  • 2 Sprigs Parsley
  • 1 Teaspoon Oregano
  • 1 Bay Leaf

 

Serves 4

Chop up the onion, bell pepper and celery and cook in a pot with the butter, stirring until the vegetables are well cooked and a little browned. Mix in the flour. Then add the finely chopped garlic, thyme and parsley and fry, stirring, for another 5 minutes or so.

Add tomatoes and either chicken stock or clam juice which has been heated up. I added about a quart of homemade chicken stock, plus a little bit of quick seafood stock I made by taking the shells from the shrimp I used in the recipe plus a couple extra sprigs of thyme and some black peppercorns and boiling in some water in a little pan for a 1/2 hour or so. I did that just to add a little more seafood flavor to the jambalaya. You could also use 1/2 chicken stock or broth and 1/2 clam juice, or as mentioned, all clam juice.

Add the bay leaf and the remaining spices and simmer on low for 1/2 hour to 45 minutes. A few minutes before serving, add the raw shelled shrimp. The shrimp should cook only long enough so it just starts to turn from translucent to opaque.

Serve over cooked rice. Garnish with fresh chopped parsley if you like. Enjoy!