We’d been buying corned beef lately but I’m usually disappointed with the small size and the last one we cooked was about one third fat and the whole thing only made four Reubens. So, I decided to get back into making my own using the 13.64 lb. choice brisket I had in the freezer and that was bought on sale for $1.99/lb.
I gave it a hard trimming and separated the flat muscle from the deckle and I ended up with just 50% meat so I now know why it was such a good deal, but it was still cheaper than the normal price.
My original plan was to corn the flat and smoke the deckle but with the flat being so small, I opted to corn it all. I used a corned beef recipe from Alton Brown for this batch. For my amount of meat, I used two gallons of water so I doubled the ingredient amounts. I also gave the spices a quick spin it food processor to break them up some.
Corned Beef – Adapted
from Alton Brown
Ingredients:
2 gal. water
2 cup kosher salt
1 cup brown sugar
4 tsp, pink curing salt
2 cinnamon stick, broken into several pieces
2 teaspoon mustard seeds
2 teaspoon black peppercorns
16 whole cloves
16 whole allspice berries
24 whole juniper berries
4 bay leaves, crumbled
1 teaspoon ground ginger
2 qt. ice
6 lb. trimmed beef brisket
Directions:
1. Place the water into a 2 qt. pot along with salt, sugar,
pink salt, cinnamon stick, mustard seeds, peppercorns, cloves, allspice,
juniper berries, bay leaves and ginger. Cook over high heat until the salt and
sugar have dissolved.
2. Remove from the heat and add the ice. Stir until the ice
has melted. Add enough cold water to make 2 gallons and place the brine into
the refrigerator until it reaches a temperature of 45 degrees F.
3. Once it has cooled, place the brisket in a 5-gallon bucket
and add the brine. Add a plate and weight on top to keep it submerged.
4. After 10-12 days, remove from the brine and rinse under
cool water.
I froze the larger piece and cooked the smaller one for supper. To cook, I covered it with water and added two tablespoons of homemade pickling spices in a crockpot and cooked it on high until it was done just right (high for five hours).
I sliced it and topped mine with some homemade kraut and
sided it with baked sweet potatoes.
The Verdict:
Everything was delicious and this corned beef was way
better than store bought so I’ll keep making my own and buy briskets if they
are ever on sale again. Also, I
discovered I prefer the orange potato as it is not as dry as the purple one –
Bev prefers the purple ones as they are a little healthier.
And for breakfast the next morning - this scramble was delicious even though I forgot the cheese.
Between these two breakfast meals, we had some delicious Reubens.
Photos can be enlarged by
clicking on them and the blue words are links.
Have a
great day and thanks for stopping by Almost Heaven South.
Larry
10/23/22
meal date
good to know you make it look so easy I tried making bacon once but wow it took 11 days and then I didnt have a professional slicer to cut it thin enough but it was good also. This looks perfect
ReplyDeleteLarry, Quite the process but the results look great! Those breakfast scrambles and right in my wheelhouse too. I never thought about sauerkraut as a scramble ingredient but then again, this combination is further proof of why you are the breakfast king! Take Care, Big Daddy Dave
ReplyDeleteNicely done. I've never tried making my own corned beef.
ReplyDeleteAlso, an open-faced scramble with corned beef on rye??? YES, PLEASE!