For St. Patrick's Day, I saw this on RR this a.m. and I think I'll try it for a change

dawnnys

Well-known member
Not into boiling or baking another fatty (or stringy) brisket again this year:

From www.rachelray.com (although when I go to the home page, it gets stuck on some kind of weird survey), so I'm posting here...

Ingredients

* 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil (EVOO), plus some for drizzling

* 3-4 small ribs celery, finely chopped

* 1 onion, finely chopped

* 1 carrot, peeled and finely chopped

* 2 cloves garlic, finely chopped

* Salt and pepper

* About 3/4 cup stout beer (half a bottle)

* 4 1-inch-thick slices good-quality white bread, stale or lightly toasted and torn

* 1 cup whole milk

* 1/2 pound deli-cut corned beef brisket, chopped

* 1 1/2 pounds ground beef

* 1 cup grated Irish sharp cheddar cheese

* 1 tablespoon dried mustard

* 1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper

* 3 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce

* 2 large eggs, lightly beaten

* 3/4 pound good-quality, thinly-sliced smoky bacon, available at your butcher counter

Serves 6-8

Preparation

Pre-heat the oven to 375°F.

Line a rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper.

Heat the EVOO, a turn of the pan, in a medium size skillet over medium to medium-high heat. Add the celery, onion, carrot and garlic; season with salt and pepper and sauté to soften, 10 minutes, stirring frequently. Pour in the beer and stir. Let the beer reduce by half. Turn off the heat and let cool.

Meanwhile, soak the bread in milk and grind the corned beef in a food processor, pulsing to finely chop. Place the corned beef and ground beef in a bowl and add the cheese. Wring out the bread and add it to the meat, crumbling it into small crumbs over the bowl. Season with salt, pepper, mustard, cayenne and Worcestershire sauce. Add the eggs, then mix with your hands to combine.

Form the meat into a long brick shape about 4 inches high on the parchment-lined baking sheet. Wrap the bacon slices across the top, then around sides of the loaf. Bake for 1 hour in the middle of the oven, then switch on the broiler for a few minutes to crisp up that bacon!

Serve with mashed potatoes and parsnips and sautéed cabbage with caraway alongside.

 
Looks to me like "Rache" hit the Guiness a little too hard. It's just a meatloaf with corned

beef, beer and cheddar mixed in. Not only does that flavor profile seem wrong (When was the last time YOU enjoyed corned beef, bacon and cheddar cheese?) but texturally, it strikes me as unpleasant. Just another reason I NEVER use her recipes but to each their own. Personally, I'd run fast and very far away.

http://www.rachaelray.com/images/recipe/IrishPubMeatloaf.jpg

 
I guess as long as you chop the corned beef enough, it'd be good (to me)

Personally, I like the flavors of corned beef, bacon and cheddar cheese. Lipito territory, I know, but it sounds very good to me! :eek:)

 
Okay, was anyone else weird enough to have a stream of consciousness that included:

seeing "Looks to me like "Rache"...

>> and....

Recalling the brilliant British series "Sherlock", Season 1, Episode 1: "A Study in Pink"

>> when...

Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson are called to a crime scene by Detective Inspector Lestrade where the word "Rache" is scratched into the floor boards. As everyone quietly stood around,

Sherlock Holmes: Shut up.
DI Lestrade: I didn't say anything!
Sherlock Holmes: You were thinking. It's annoying.

Snobby know-it-all forensic pathologist on the crime scene states: "She's German. Rache. It's German for "revenge."

Sherlock, unable to hid utter distain for snobby know-it-all forensic pathologist shuts the door in his face. Sherlock then explains the obvious deductions he's made in under 2 minutes. Dr. Watson says these facts aren't obvious to him.

SH: Dear God, what is it like inside your funny little brains. It must be so boring!

More deductions and a final analysis.

SH, turning to Lestrade: Find out who Rachel is.
DI Lestrande: She was writing "Rachel"?
SH: No, she was leaving an angry note in German. Of course she was writing Rachel!

 
Wow, Marilyn. You should see someone for that. (Nothing some gentle 'lectro shock wouldn't fix.)

Trust me, I've had DOZENS of treatments and the only side-effect is the occasional twitch.

 
At least she can get deli corned beef. I tried in my neighborhood this afternoon

El Rancho and La Michoacana certainly don't have. Walmart Market has always had corned beef briskets. Not this year and not even any deli corned beef. If it ain't Mexican I can't get it and I am more and more frustrated by this. Not that I don't love these stores for some things, but I don't cook Mexican food every day. I couldn't get sauerkraut either.

 
Back
Top