суббота, 27 сентября 2014 г.

corned beef potato salad

Jamaican Corned Beef and Cabbage recipe How to Cook GREAT Food yardy cooking








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Corned beef is a salt-cured beef product. The term comes from the treatment of the meat with "corns" of salt. It features as an ingredient in many cuisines, including Jewish and Caribbean cuisines. Although the exact beginnings of corned beef have been lost to history, it most likely came about when people began preserving meat through salt-curing. Evidence of its legacy is apparent in numerous cultures, including Ancient Europe, and the Middle East. The word corn derives from Old English, which is used to describe any small hard particles or grains. In the case of "corned beef", the word refers to the coarse granular salts used to cure the beef.
Although the practice of curing beef was found locally in many cultures, the industrial production of corned beef started in the English Industrial Revolution. Irish corned beef was used and traded extensively from the 17th century to the mid 19th century for English civilian consumption and as provisions for the British naval fleets and North American armies due to its non-perishable nature. The product was also traded to the French for use in Caribbean sugar plantations as sustenance for the colonist and the slave laborers. The 17th-century English and Irish industrial processes for corned beef did not distinguish between different cuts of beef beyond the tough and undesirable parts such as the beef necks and shanks. Rather, the grading was done by the weight of the cattle into "small beef", "cargo beef", and "best mess beef", the former being the worst and the latter the best. Much of the undesirable portions and lower grades were traded to the French, while better parts were saved for English consumption or shipped to English colonies. Although it ceased to be an important commodity in the 19th century Atlantic trade due in part to the abolition of slavery, corned beef production and its canned form remained important as a food source during World War II. Much of the canned corned beef came from Fray Bentos in Uruguay, with over 16 million cans exported in 1943. Even now, significant amounts of the global canned corned beef supply comes from South America.




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You'll Need:

4 to 5 medium potatoes
2 tbs vinegar
2 tsp sugar
1 tsp celery seeds
1 tsp prepared mustard
1/2 tsp salt
1 can (12oz) corned beef, flaked
2 cups shredded cabbage
1/4 cup chopped dill pickle
1/4 cup chopped onion
1 cup salad dressing or mayonnaise

Procedures : Cook potatoes in boiling water 20 to 25 minutes or until tender. Drain and cool slightly. Peel potatoes and cut into 1/2 cubes while warm. Combine vinegar, sugar, celery seeds, mustard, and salt; add to potatoes; toss gently. Add corned beef, cabbage, pickle, and onion to potato mixture; toss gently again. Chill at least 8 hours. Add salad dressing or mayo just before serving and, you guessed it, toss gently

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