Classic Beef Brisket With Caramelized Onions

- Total Time
- About 4 hours, plus overnight marinating
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 3tablespoons kosher salt
- ½teaspoon black pepper
- 1teaspoon paprika (preferably Hungarian)
- Pinch of cayenne
- 5 to 7pounds beef brisket, not too lean
- 1cup red or white wine
- 12cloves
- 1whole head of garlic
- 3bay leaves
- 3allspice berries
- 6large onions, peeled, and sliced crosswise ¼-inch thick
- 3tablespoons olive oil
- Parsley sprigs, for garnish
- ¼cup slivered scallions (optional)
Preparation
- Step 1
In a small bowl, mix together salt, pepper, paprika and cayenne. Season brisket generously on all sides with salt mixture. (Use about 2 tablespoons and reserve remaining mixture.) If possible, wrap and refrigerate several hours or overnight, then bring to room temperature.
- Step 2
Heat oven to 300 degrees. Place brisket in a shallow roasting pan or earthenware baking dish. Pour wine and 2 cups water over the brisket, then add cloves, garlic, bay leaves and allspice berries.
- Step 3
Scatter about ⅓ of the sliced onions over brisket. Cover with foil or a tight-fitting lid. Place in oven and bake for about 3 hours or until meat is quite tender when probed with a fork. (Be careful not to overcook; you want slices, not shreds.)
- Step 4
Meanwhile, place a large skillet over high heat and add olive oil. Add remaining onions and season with remaining salt mixture. As onions begin to brown, reduce heat to medium. Cook, uncovered, turning onion slices with a spatula every few minutes until caramelized and fork-tender, about 15 to 20 minutes. Add ½ cup water to onions and simmer a few minutes more. (For more flavor, use broth from the brisket pan instead.) Onions may be prepared in advance and reheated.
- Step 5
To serve, transfer brisket to a cutting board. Trim extraneous fat from meat. With a large knife, cut meat across the grain into ¼-inch slices. Strain braising liquid into a saucepan (discard solids left in strainer) and skim any rising fat from surface.
- Step 6
Arrange sliced meat on a platter. Cover with caramelized onions and ladle some hot braising liquid over. Garnish with parsley sprigs and sprinkle with scallions, if using. Serve remaining juices separately.
- For ease of serving (and increased flavor) prepare the brisket a day in advance, cover with braising juices and refrigerate. Next day, lift the lid off and discard congealed fat. Reheat, covered, in a 350-degree oven for about 1 hour.
Private Notes
Comments
This is very similar to my mother's much-ballyhooed recipe, although she used beef bouillon cubes, not wine. Her "secret" to getting the perfect slices was to braise the meat (and big onions; they are so divine when sautéed, then thrown into the cooking meat!), removing the brisket after about an hour. She would slice the meat while still rare, and allow the broth to separate from the fat overnight. The next day, the brisket can simmer away to tender perfection, already sliced.
If you are covering with tight fitting lid, why use "shallow roasting pan"? Wouldn't dutch oven work as well?
I usually use 5 onions cut up and putting the brisket on top of them in a dutch oven, I use a bottle of guiness with a splash of soy sauce, salt, pepper, put cover on then into a 475 degree oven for 15 minutes, turn down to 300 degrees and cook for about three hours. If you want you can add many carrots after about two and a half hours. When the knife goes in easily take out of oven and let rest with lid off for about 45 minutes. Delicious and yes, the next day a sandwich or just heat it up
Cooked this as specified with 2 updates: used French red wine (same as for boeuf bourguignon) and used beef stock in place of the water. Second cut of brisket so it was higher in fat and followed the recommendation to cook the day in advance and trim/slice/reheat when ready to serve. For 2 days of work and being quite expensive, I was hoping for something good - what we got was something exceptional. Highly recommend.
Pared down the ingredients and the time in the oven for 4 servings. Used lots of onions at the start, none later. Used a dutch oven, cooked it the day before, so that I could pull the meat out cold to slice it, as suggested. Heated it up with added red wine, homemade chicken stock, and added peas. Served it over white rice with a green salad. The meat didn't fall apart but you could cut it with a spoon. Deelishus.
I made this pretty much according to the recipe--I was a bit concerned that it would come out a bit unremarkable, and it was indeed unremarkable. BTW I cooked for 3 hours at 300, then 2 more hours at 225, so the meat was nicely tender without falling apart. The result was completely serviceable, but definitely not a "keeper". I really don't get all the over-the-top reviews. Looking for another recipe now.
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