St. Patrick's Day is just around the corner, and we're celebrating on the podcast this week with some Irish-inspired food.
You'll learn how to grow your own potatoes and then we're reinventing your typical mashed potato recipe by adding some rutabagas to the mix. And we'll also learn how to make corned beef.
Brewing "Green" Beer: Sustainable Home Brewing
But first, it wouldn't be a true St. Patrick's Day without a frothy "green" beer.
These days, more and more people are exploring the art of home brewing and over the next few month Earth Eats' Josephine McRobbie will be talking with some home brewers about beer and sustainability.
Read: From Backyard to Bottle: Home Brewing Goes Green
How To: Grow Your Own Potatoes
It's still a bit chilly outside, but it's not too early to start thinking about your garden. This season, why not try planting some potatoes?
Growing potatoes in baskets like this protects them from moles and other critters.
Perhaps the promise of potatoes come summer will inspire you to get gardening, even during these cold days.
Now, for our first recipe (which, incidentally, isn't Irish, but you can always pretend), we're pairing potatoes with another root vegetable – rutabagas.
Recipe: Grandma Orr's Polish Rutabaga Mash
Polish rutabaga-potato mash – brukiew z ziemniak – is a popular recipe because it uses two vegetables that have become favorites in Poland for their overwintering properties.
Makes 6 servings
Ingredients:
Directions:
History Of Corned Beef
We think of corned beef and cabbage as a traditional Irish dish, but it's really an Irish American dish.
Corning was originally a method of preserving beef for ocean travel, where the beef would be stacked in barrels with corning spices and then when it was time to eat it, it would be taken out and boiled.
So Irish immigrants experienced corned beef on the trip over on the boat, and they found it very satisfying and really a kind of a celebration. We think of it as not a really classy dish but, when done right, it can be a wonderful celebration.
Grass-Fed Beef
You hear a lot about the benefits of grass-fed beef these days, and Jim Fiedler, the owner of Fielder Farms, knows a thing or two about the process. We talked with him as he was dropping off the beef brisket for our corned beef. Listen to the interview »
Now into the kitchen to prepare the corned beef. Chef Daniel Orr explains that a corning paste is a mixture of peppercorns and seeds.
Brining Beef Brisket (for Corned Beef)
Ingredients:
Directions:
The longer you leave the spice mixture on the beef, you'll get more and more flavor. You do want to keep mixing the brine and turning the meat so it gets evenly spiced. Once you take the beef out of the mixture, you could use it right away, or it can last several days in the fridge.
To prepare the corned beef:
And there you have it, a great St. Patrick's Day meal.
Next Week
Next week on the podcast we'll be looking at a variety of Jewish food traditions as we get ready for passover.
Chef Orr even prepares potato latkes that gets one of our Jewish friends in trouble with his grandmother (they're just that good).
Subscribe to the podcast in iTunesto be sure not to miss it.