Corned Beef with Cabbage Instapot

skunkmonkey101
skunkmonkey101 @skunk_monkey101
Dover, Florida

First time I used the instapot for this recipe. Corned beef exist because of England. When the Roman armies invaded Briton they introduced beef to England. They became the number one consumer of beef way back since the 1600's. They imported cattle from Ireland, and Europe. In the cattle acts of 1663 and 1667 the live cattle could no longer be imported into England. So the Irish started production of salted beef. The salt was the size of corn kernels. Thus corned beef. This also drove the price of beef down.

After the Cattle Acts, salt was the main reason Ireland became the hub for corned beef. Irelands salt tax was almost 1/10 that of England’s and could import the highest quality at an inexpensive price. With the large quantities of cattle and high quality of salt, Irish corned beef was the best on the market. It didn’t take long for Ireland to be supplying Europe and the Americas with its wares. But, this corned beef was much different than what we call corned beef today. With the meat being cured with salt the size of corn kernels, the taste was much more salt than beef.

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Ingredients

  1. 3-1/4 poundcorned beef brisket with little spice packet
  2. 1medium head of green cabbage
  3. As neededsalt
  4. 1 stickbutter
  5. 1 cupwater

Cooking Instructions

  1. 1

    Cut the cabbage into eighths. Season each wedge with salt. Season the nonfat side of brisket. Add the cabbage to the bottom of the instapot. Add 1 cup water to pot.

  2. 2

    Add the brisket on top of cabbage fat side up. Season with the envelope of seasonings that comes with the brisket. Season with salt cut the butter into pats and add. Pressure cook low pressure. Do that for 45 minutes then turn to slow cook for 4 hours.

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Comments (2)

iWoodsman
iWoodsman @iWoodsman
Historical note: the word “corn” in old and middle English meant any “small granular things” and did not specifically refer to the vegetable maize that came from the Americas. The opposite is true: kernels of maize came to be called corns, then corn. Corns of salt meant grains of salt, although the grains were indeed large rock-salt size as you say. And while the corned beef of Ireland was of the greatest commercial significance to the western world, heavily salted beef had been made throughout Eastern Europe and Asia for centuries.

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skunkmonkey101
skunkmonkey101 @skunk_monkey101
on
Dover, Florida
This picture is me and my oldest daughter. I love Asian, Mediterranean, and Southern food.I hope you enjoy my recipes, if you have any questions please ask. The app only allows so many followings, they put a limit on how many we can follow I have reached my limit. If it wasn't there I would follow back everyone, sorry....
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