Sunday, March 18, 2007



Truth be told, I love St. Patrick's Day. No, I'm not Catholic and no... I'm not Irish. But hey, who doesn't love a boiled meal accompanied by lots of beer and whiskey?

From my short stay in Bowling Green, I witnessed some amazingly asinine behavior from the local college students and some great foodie moments from both my own Kitchen and the always wonderful Trotters Tavern.

Perhaps one of the greatest moments was when, after a hearty meal of eggs, rashers and whiskey at Trotters, a very drunk young man came up to Kerrie and I and asked if I was going to finish my food. After I replied with a lengthy Nooooo... he just snatched up a piece of pork and stumbled out the front door.

Or, for those keeping track, there was that one St. Patrick's Day where I made dinner and told guests to bring some good beer. One of which showed up with a 24-pack of Natty Light. (Bonus: She told me I could keep the rest for, you know, whatever!)

Skipping forward, I wanted to have a big 'ole St. Paddy's Day meal seeing as it fell on a Saturday this year. So I did.

Kerrie and I started the day by heading up to the University for a breakfast catering I had to assemble, the jumped over to the College Hill Coffee Company for a breakfast of our own. After a nice Au Lait and a Cinnamon Belgium Waffle, we went and got groceries.

The remainder of the day was filled with drinking and cooking and baking. I started by making a great Irish Soda bread, from a recipe my mom gave me at Christmas. The bread, by the way, turned out so nice. Crusty on the outside and fluffy and light on the inside.

My next task was to get my special Corned Beef going, then bake off a Chocolate Stout Cake. Corned beef, incidentally, is not something I crave often but IS something I truly do love. (If made well...)

I made my first Corned Beef a few years ago and it was amazing. Lots of people around, drinking and eating and listening to bagpipes on the Hi-Fi. It was a great night, and I scored a case of Natty Light. (Sniff Sniff - smell that? That was Sarcasm...)

So to bring back the glory of St. Patrick's Days which have past, I made my version of Corned Beef. And it goes a little sumptin' like this:

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Corned Beef

Serves 2
(3 Hours Cooking Time, Plus prep)

2-3 Pound beef brisket
48 .oz Killian’s Irish Red (4 Bottles)
¼ cup Orange Juice
1 Orange
25 Cloves
1 T Olive Oil
1 t Dry Mustard
1 t Caraway Seed
¼ t Thyme
1 T Whole Black Peppercorns

2 Carrots, peeled, cut and turned
3 Red Potatoes, cut into quarters
2 Onions, peeled and quartered

Brussels Sprouts
1 T Butter

Start by washing off the beef brisket and then set aside.

Take the cloves and stud the orange all the way around. (You may actually need more or less cloves depending on the size of the orange.)

In a large heavy pot, pour in olive oil then add the brisket, the orange, and the Killian’s and the orange juice. (You may need to add some cold water to make sure the liquid covers the meat and the orange.) Turn on the heat and bring to a boil, then reduce to a simmer.

Add the mustard, caraway, thyme and peppercorns. Simmer gently for 2 ½ hours.

At the end of the 2½ hours, add the carrots, red potatoes, and the onions. Cook for a ½ hour longer.

Once cooked, remove the brisket from the liquid and set aside to rest for 5 minutes. During this time, quickly cook the Brussels sprouts in rapidly boiling salted water for 3-4 minutes. Drain and return to pan, then toss with butter.

Serve Corned Beef in slices with a spoon full of vegetables and Brussels sprouts.

---

The rest of the evening rounded out with a Chocolate Stout Cake, more drinkin' and Van Morrison. And, God help me, I 'm already looking forward to the next one. (Which is on a Monday. Boy, that'll suck for DinnerRoll on Tuesday the 18'Th...)










stpaddysgroove:
Van Morrison - Into the Mystic
Van Morrison - Gloria
Van Morrison - Tupelo Honey
Van Morrison - Crazy Love
Van Morrison - Brand New Day
Sinead O'Connor - Make Me A Channel of Your Peace
The Pogues - Haunted


"You have to be careful with that demographic. They'll come at you like a whirling Dervish, all fists and elbows. You'll be saying "Stop! Stop! Stop!" and all they'll hear is "Who wants cake?" And they all want cake."
- From Fark.com, on the use of the term "retard"

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

st. patrick's day dinner at my current restaurant, the blue light grill:

rioja braised beef shortribs, bacon smashed potatoes and "bacon fat roasted baby savoie cabbage" (brussel sprouts) with beef glace.

it was tasty.

BGslum said...

Hey Nick, where are you at now?

First off, that meal sounded amazing. Second, I tried a braised\roasted combo on some short ribs a few weeks back. It tasted good, but I wasn't entirely happy with the final outcome.

Nonetheless, good luck with ya there...

Kristy said...

While I'm sure that your corned beef was tasty, your recipe is missing two very important ingredients - Jameson and vinegar. Well, you can give or take the vinegar, but it's just not right without the Jameson.

I mean, corned beef without Jameson is like meatloaf without Dickel. Well at least you didn't cook it in water...

BGslum said...

Mmmm... Haven't had any "Dickel Loaf" in a while. (Shudder)

I actually debated the addition of whiskey, but since the whole thing was done in Irish Beer there was no point. Especially with the orange, cloves, and mustard. The unfortunate outcome would be that the flavor would be drowned out. Now, on the other hand, I wonder what a corned beef done entirely in Jameson would be like... yum-ay!

Anonymous said...

yo.

i'm working at the blue light grill in charlottesville, virginia. the website is http://www.bluelightgrill.com

also, i'm flying to portland, oregon in a week to stage at the wildwood, which i'm sure you'll have no problem finding a website for.

hope the cooking life is going well for you. certainly it has been with me.

BGslum said...

P.S. - Kristy, go to Edwards webjournal and look for the picture of Harr.

Wait for it...

Wait for it...

Yeah...

Kristy said...

Yeah dude, that's why I don't use Killians anymore. A few years ago, I switched it out in favor of a milder stout - Murphy's or Smithwicks - combine that with Jameson or Bushmills and you've got pure Irish heaven in a crockpot. Yes, I use a crockpot. You got a problem with that?

That Harr picture? Priceless!

Anonymous said...

Why is it I have never been out with you on St. Patty's Day?? Nor at your house for dinner and Natty Light on St. Patty's Day??