St. Patrick’s Day Corned Beef & Cabbage

FYI: This post originally appeared April 17, 2011.

Truth: I do not go out for St. Patrick’s Day because, like all other High Drinking Days (Mardi Gras, Cinco De Mayo, New Year’s Eve, etc), that’s when the amateurs are out.

Also, the last time I was out for Pittsburgh’s St. Patrick’s Day parade I watched a guy propped up against a parked car slide ALL the way down the side of it and, without breaking his fall, face plant into the green-glittered curb. And that was my first and last St. Patty’s Day parade.

DO NOT BE THIS GIRL

But you might be looking for something tasty and filling to counteract all of the green beer, Guinness and Irish whisky you will no doubt have imbibed.

So, please let me suggest the following menu, in honor of the day when a guy in green got rid of all the snakes in Ireland or whatnot.

So, if you, too, are staying in over St. Patrick’s Day and avoiding all of the public intoxication, you may fancy #43 New England Boiled Dinner…

All last week Cleve and I were willing hostages in our own home. We committed ourselves to The Kennedys, the much-maligned 8-part mini-series that was produced by The History Channel and then subsequently dumped because of ‘historical inaccuracy.’ A few other networks passed on it as well and it ended up on something called the Reelz Channel, which most of America has never heard of. If you like a good conspiracy, you can believe the rumor that the Kennedy offspring had it killed.

Or! If you really like conspiracies, you can believe (according to The Kennedys) that Frank Sinatra was the liaison between Joe Kennedy Sr. and mob-boss Sam Giancana and that the reason that JFK won Chicago, and ultimately the presidency,  is because Sinatra promised Sam that, as president, JFK would ignore a lot of Sam’s illegal activities.  Therefore, when Bobby, as Attorney General, declared his war on organized crime, this pissed Giancana off so much that he put a hit out on JFK (is anyone else thinking about the plot of Johnny Dangerously?). Anyway, Lee Harvey Oswald was just a patsy because the real shooter was a mob hitman in a drainage tunnel under the grassy knoll. Or Cigarette Smoking Man. And all of this happened because Frank couldn’t hold up his end of the bargain. So the only logical conclusion is that Frank Sinatra is directly responsible for the death of JFK, RFK, and the destruction of a nation’s innocence. And I thought he was just a guy with a golden voice who had a penchant for whiskey, ladies, and Las Vegas.

So those are the sort of liberties that were taken with this series. I think that Cleve and I were 2 of all 15 people who watched this thing; but Cleve is a bit of a Kennedy-phile so we were obligated to tune in.*(see end of post)

In honor of the 2-part finale last Sunday I dedicated #43 New England Boiled Dinner, to America’s Royal Family. I think it is obvious why #43 was the winner. The only way this meal could get more Irish is if I garnished it with shamrocks.

I like any sort of one-pot meal, so I was a big fan of #43. The most difficult part of it was that I had to drive to Giant to buy a corned beef (thank you, Safeway for stocking such a wonderful selection of meat). Everything else was a breeze! There was such minimal chopping (just quartering and halving),  I bought a pie (I’m lazy), used canned beets, and I nixed the white sauce (screw you bechemel) so I simply mixed horseradish, sour cream, and mustard for the sauce. TA-DA! A finished meal!

My lobster swizzle stick is precious

Since it was so simple I decided to jazz up the Chilled Tomato and Clam Juice. So I present to you: Jackie-O’s Clamato Cocktail!

Combine the following and serve on ice with lemon.

  • 1 jigger vodka
  • 8 oz. Clamato juice
  • 1 tsp grated horseradish
  • 1/2 tsp Worcestershire
  • 3/4 tsp hot sauce
  • 1/2 tsp Old Bay
  • 1/2 tsp fresh lemon juice
  • black pepper to taste

Cleve says that Clamato sounds like a sexually transmitted disease. Well, Jackie probably had 1 or 2 with all of JFK’s extramarital activities.

But I digress.

My changes to #43 were minuscule: the aforementioned omission of white sauce, a shorter boil time since my beef was half the size as suggested, and the addition of peppercorns to the boiling water. The beef started to boil at 3pm and we ate at 6:45, just in time to enjoy two more hours of Katie Holmes’ doe eyes and fluctuating accents (are you from Long Island, England, or Brooklyn, hon?).

If you’ve had corned beef and cabbage before, you know that it can be a pretty bland dish. I think that the sweetness of the beets and carrots tempered that, and the subtle kick of the turnip was much appreciated. No one flavor over-powered the rest. And the kick of the mustard sauce and the spice of the cocktail were perfect accompaniments. I think that #43 was a victory. I really liked it.

Cleve’s review: “It’s very WASPy.” Uh, HELLO! The Kennedys were big ol’ Catholics!

The Kennedys wasn’t the best thing on TV, but it also wasn’t anywhere as near as bad as I thought it would be. There were some good performances, but the script was whore-end-ous. And speaking of whores–if JFK’s back was as jacked as they portrayed in the film, and if he really was on 20 different controlled substances, how did he have the stamina/ability to be the prolific philanderer we all know him to be? It boggles the mind.

The series as a whole was very stylish, light on substance, and all kinds of soapy, which we are going to need a lot more of now that All My Children and One Life to Live have been cancelled. Sad face. First the Guiding Light, and now this. All My Children and Guiding Light were with me for the good times and the bad times, for flus and summer vacations and bouts of unemployment. What is my mum going to update me with when we’re on the phone? Real life? Updates on my relatives? Bor-ing. No offense, relatives, but you don’t hold a candle to the residents of Pine Valley. Anyway, I raise my glass to you, Erica Kane Martin Brent Cudahy Chandler Montgomery Montgomery Chandler Marick Marick Montgomery! You are the epitome of fabulousness and will be dearly missed.

Well, here is the Dinner is Served! side-by-side. Don’t they look as eerily similar as Greg Kinnear does to JFK?

Or not. But do I get bonus points for my awesome stars and stripes background?

* Funny story, one night out at Aloha Sushi we were doing a bit of karaoke and a young African-American lady said to Cleveland, “you are Kennedy-fine!” and I thought that his Kennedy-fine head was going to fall off he was so full of glee.  

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22 thoughts on “St. Patrick’s Day Corned Beef & Cabbage

  1. Emily, how did your corned beef and cabbage turn out? The one thing I was missing was the recipe for mustard sauce, so I turned to another oldie-but-goodie, my Time Life “Cooking of The British Isles”, which came out in the 60’s (yes!! I’ve been collecting THAT long!). I found a good, but not great, recipe which starts with a roux, adds milk and cream, white vinegar, Dijon, dry mustard and salt to taste. It was OK, but not great until I added a tablespoon of French’s Sweet Onion Mustard. Then it was just awesome, especially with the corned beef. BTW, it was so quick to put together, and the leftovers are in a jar. Makes me smile to think of it.

    1. Joyce, I hope you had a great St. Patrick’s Day. Mine turned out fairly well–my veggies were a little overdone and mushy, but the beef itself was good and my mustard sauce was a winner. I went the easy route: dijon mustard, mayo, sour cream, and jarred horseradish. Corned beef & mustard–I never would’ve thunk it before Dinner is Served! I’m actually having the leftovers for lunch today. I’m looking forward to it.

  2. Worse than being That Girl would be being That Guy. In neither photo does he look drunk enough to be dealing with that shit.

  3. It has been many, many moons since I last had corned beef. I tried making it all of once just so I could say that I had done it.

    PS, I think you need to start taking your grocery dollars elsewhere. The Safeway on 25th is just not treating you right.

  4. Safeway didn’t have corned beef? Seriously? Honey, you need to move out of that neighborhood and into the suburbs!

    1. I got the corned beef yesterday from the Safeway–on SUPER SALE. My beef was only $3 and change.
      They didn’t have the corned beef back in April when I made this the first time.

    1. Aside from the fact you can’t have a Bloody Caesar without it, it’s fast becoming the national drink – of Canada, anyway – which may explain a lot . . . Try it!!

      1. The Bud & Clamato sounds eerily reminiscent of the Michelada that I had when I lived in Brooklyn–Mexican beer with tomato hot sauce in a salt and pepper rimmed glass. My ex said it best: “this tastes like the condensation from an air conditioner in Mexico City.”

        I thought the Clamato was good in the bloody mary.

  5. Boy, I sure wish I had some Blueberry Pie…not Sarah Lee…homemade! I have had bad luck lately with cryovac corned beef. Maybe I have to be more picky the last one was half fat, hidden by the package labeling, and so tough I used 20 yards of dental floss getting it out of my teeth. I had enough in the sink for lunch!

  6. It wouldn’t be St. Patrick’s Day without this great dinner! Fortunately we have (don’t hate me for this) a boil-in-a-bag corned beef brisket that has a similar recipe on the bag. It’s produced by Maple Leaf meats here in Canada and is simply scrumptious. I have to confess to never having added beets to the recipe but might try it this year just to be different. Loved your mustard sauce idea!!

    1. Karen, I’ve heard of red flannel hash but have never seen/heard it. Do you have a good recipe for it? I will most definitely have leftovers since it’s just the 2 of us.

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