Homemade Corned Beef

Homemade Corned Beef
Melina Hammer for The New York Times
Total Time
3 hours, plus 5 days' brining
Rating
4(1,451)
Comments
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“The reason to corn your own beef is flavor,” said Michael Ruhlman, a chef and passionate advocate of the process. He wrote about it with Brian Polcyn in their book, “Charcuterie: The Craft of Salting, Smoking and Curing.” “You can achieve tastes that aren’t available in the mass produced versions,” he said. Feel free to experiment with the “pickling spices” called for below — you can customize them, if you like, from a base of coriander seeds, black peppercorns and garlic — but please do not omit the curing salt, which gives the meat immense flavor in addition to a reddish hue. (It’s perfectly safe, Mr. Ruhlman exhorts: “It’s not a chemical additive. Most of the nitrates we eat come in vegetables!”) Finally, if you want a traditional boiled dinner, slide quartered cabbage and some peeled carrots into the braise for the final hour or so of cooking. Or use the meat for Irish tacos.

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Ingredients

Yield:8 to 12 servings
  • 2cups coarse kosher salt
  • ½cup sugar
  • 5garlic cloves, smashed
  • 5tablespoons pickling spices
  • 1tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon pink curing salt (sodium nitrite)
  • 14- to 5-pound beef brisket
  • 2bottles of good beer
  • 2bottles of good ginger beer
Ingredient Substitution Guide
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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Brine the brisket: In a medium pot set over high heat, combine about a gallon of water, the salt, the sugar, the garlic, 3 tablespoons pickling spices and the pink curing salt. Stir mixture as it heats until sugar and salt are dissolved, about 1 minute. Transfer liquid to a container large enough for the brine and the brisket, then refrigerate until liquid is cool.

  2. Step 2

    Place brisket in the cooled liquid and weigh the meat down with a plate so it is submerged. Cover container and place in the refrigerator for 5 days, or up to 7 days, turning every day or so.

  3. Step 3

    To cook brisket, remove it from the brine and rinse under cool water. Place in a pot just large enough to hold it and cover with one of the beers and one of the ginger beers. If you need more liquid to cover the meat, add enough of the other beer, and the other ginger beer, to do so. Add remaining 2 tablespoons pickling spices. Bring to a boil over high heat, then turn heat to low so liquid is barely simmering. Cover and let cook until you can easily insert a fork into the meat, about 3 hours, adding water along the way if needed to cover the brisket.

  4. Step 4

    Keep warm until serving, or let cool in the liquid and reheat when ready to eat, up to three or four days. Slice thinly and serve on sandwiches, in Irish tacos (see recipe) or with carrots and cabbage simmered until tender in the cooking liquid.

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4 out of 5
1,451 user ratings
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Comments

Why heat all of the water when you are preparing the brine and have to let it cool? When I make a brine for a turkey I heat about a quart of water with salt, sugar and spices heat and stir until dissolved and then add this to the rest of the cold water, mix and add meat.

I have used Ruhlman's recipe for years, with the Penzey's Corned Beef Spices. I cook the brined brisket in a slow cooker, fat side up, for 8 hrs on low, with 1-1/2 C water. Before serving I glaze it in the oven at 350 for ~15 minutes, until golden brown, and then let it rest ~15 minutes before slicing. Divine!
Glaze:
3 tablespoons packed brown sugar
1 ½ tablespoons soy sauce
1 ½ teaspoons dry mustard
1 teaspoon ground ginger

I've followed this recipe for several years and it's excellent. once it's cured i smoke it for about 5 to 6 hours (sort of pastrami?) and then braise it gently in Guinness with assorted root vegetables. but i serve it with colcannon cakes so no cabbage. followed by a Guinness/ chocolate cake from Nigella which is both unusual and delicious. and of course soda bread -- in this case with currants and mixed herbs.

I’ve been bring my corned beef a couple of times a year for several years now:(for 5#) 2 tsp black peppercorns 2 tsp mustard seed 2 tsp coriander seeds 2 tsp red pepper flakes 2 tsp allspice berries 1 tsp ground mace 1 small cinnamon stick broken into pieces 1 bay leaves 2 tsp whole cloves 1 tsp ground ginger 3/4 c kosher salt 1/2 c brown sugar 2 Tbs pink salt 4 cloves garlic smashed Very tasty and not too salty!

do you have to refrigerate during brining?

Followed the instructions without improving them! Turned out great. It cost half again as much as last minute supermarket bagged CB brisket, but that won't stop me next year. Saltiness is subjective. "Corned" means "salt" and so while you have some control while doing it your self, it's still going to be salty. Curing salt is easy to come by with next day delivery from that huge online retailer. With a bit of searching, I've never not found an ingredient suggested by NYT cooking.

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