Hamilton Journal News

3 St. Patrick’s Day recipes to enjoy that aren’t hash

Term ‘corned’ comes from size of salt kernels used in curing beef.

- By JeanMarie Brownson The Daily Meal C8

For many of us, corned beef tastes delicious every day of the year.

But its popularity soars on Saint Patrick’s Day — Irish heritage optional.

Like green beer, this holiday food tradition is largely a phenomenon in the United States.

In fact, today’s corned beef is more Jewish than Irish. It’s rare to encounter it in Ireland.

The British are credited for corning beef in the 17th century by curing fresh beef with salt for preservati­on. Shaylyn Esposito, writing in the Smithsonia­n Magazine (March 15, 2013), explains that the term “corned” comes from the size of the salt kernels used in the curing.

For tax reasons, Irish salt was less expensive than British salt, so cattle was shipped to Ireland to be corned. Irish corned beef was exported to Europe and the Americas until the end of the 18th century when the demand declined as the North American colonies produced their own.

A million Irish people immigrated to this country during Ireland’s Great Famine, frequently landing first in New York alongside Jewish immigrants from Eastern and Central Europe. Here, the Irish embraced beef — especially corned beef.

However, Esposito explains that “the corned beef the Irish immigrants ate was much different than that produced in Ireland 200 years prior. The Irish immigrants almost solely bought their meat from kosher butchers. And what we think of today as Irish corned beef is actually Jewish corned beef thrown into a pot with cabbage and potatoes.”

Since brisket is a tough cut of beef, it is well-suited to the salting and cooking that transforms it into tender, tasty corned beef.

This all explains why today corned beef can be found in Irish-American households and Jewish delis alike.

Armed with these kernels of knowledge, it’s time to get cooking. You can simmer corned beef roasts (sold in cry-o-vac packages in the meat case) with a little Irish stout and fresh orange slices in the oven. The whole house will smell delicious, hopefully providing a pleasant distractio­n when working in our home offices.

At dinnertime, a peppery maple glaze will make the whole dish shine. When time is short, you can channel a delicatess­en and simply enjoy a warm corned beef sandwich, made from deli-sliced, fully cooked corned beef on rye bread with zesty horseradis­h-spiked mayonnaise.

And leftover corned beef tastes great tucked into creamy,

Corned

Baked corned beef, caramelize­d onions and carrots make this dish delicious and comforting. At dinnertime, a peppery maple glaze will make the whole dish shine.

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