Homemade Corned Beef Recipe (2024)

By Sam Sifton

Homemade Corned Beef Recipe (1)

Total Time
3 hours, plus 5 days' brining
Rating
4(1,370)
Notes
Read community notes

“The reason to corn your own beef is flavor,” said Michael Ruhlman, a chef and passionate advocate of the process. He wrote about it with Brian Polcyn in their book, “Charcuterie: The Craft of Salting, Smoking and Curing.” “You can achieve tastes that aren’t available in the mass produced versions,” he said. Feel free to experiment with the “pickling spices” called for below — you can customize them, if you like, from a base of coriander seeds, black peppercorns and garlic — but please do not omit the curing salt, which gives the meat immense flavor in addition to a reddish hue. (It’s perfectly safe, Mr. Ruhlman exhorts: “It’s not a chemical additive. Most of the nitrates we eat come in vegetables!”) Finally, if you want a traditional boiled dinner, slide quartered cabbage and some peeled carrots into the braise for the final hour or so of cooking. Or use the meat for Irish tacos.

Featured in: What if You Could Make Great Corned Beef?

  • or to save this recipe.

  • Subscriber benefit: give recipes to anyone

    As a subscriber, you have

    10 gift recipes to give each month. Anyone can view them - even nonsubscribers.

    Learn more.

    Subscribe

  • Print Options

    Include recipe photo

Advertisem*nt

Ingredients

Yield:8 to 12 servings

  • 2cups coarse kosher salt
  • ½cup sugar
  • 5garlic cloves, smashed
  • 5tablespoons pickling spices
  • 1tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon pink curing salt (sodium nitrite)
  • 14- to 5-pound beef brisket
  • 2bottles of good beer
  • 2bottles of good ginger beer

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Brine the brisket: In a medium pot set over high heat, combine about a gallon of water, the salt, the sugar, the garlic, 3 tablespoons pickling spices and the pink curing salt. Stir mixture as it heats until sugar and salt are dissolved, about 1 minute. Transfer liquid to a container large enough for the brine and the brisket, then refrigerate until liquid is cool.

  2. Step

    2

    Place brisket in the cooled liquid and weigh the meat down with a plate so it is submerged. Cover container and place in the refrigerator for 5 days, or up to 7 days, turning every day or so.

  3. Step

    3

    To cook brisket, remove it from the brine and rinse under cool water. Place in a pot just large enough to hold it and cover with one of the beers and one of the ginger beers. If you need more liquid to cover the meat, add enough of the other beer, and the other ginger beer, to do so. Add remaining 2 tablespoons pickling spices. Bring to a boil over high heat, then turn heat to low so liquid is barely simmering. Cover and let cook until you can easily insert a fork into the meat, about 3 hours, adding water along the way if needed to cover the brisket.

  4. Step

    4

    Keep warm until serving, or let cool in the liquid and reheat when ready to eat, up to three or four days. Slice thinly and serve on sandwiches, in Irish tacos (see recipe) or with carrots and cabbage simmered until tender in the cooking liquid.

Ratings

4

out of 5

1,370

user ratings

Your rating

or to rate this recipe.

Have you cooked this?

or to mark this recipe as cooked.

Private Notes

Leave a Private Note on this recipe and see it here.

Cooking Notes

Terri McFadden

Why heat all of the water when you are preparing the brine and have to let it cool? When I make a brine for a turkey I heat about a quart of water with salt, sugar and spices heat and stir until dissolved and then add this to the rest of the cold water, mix and add meat.

Nancy

I have used Ruhlman's recipe for years, with the Penzey's Corned Beef Spices. I cook the brined brisket in a slow cooker, fat side up, for 8 hrs on low, with 1-1/2 C water. Before serving I glaze it in the oven at 350 for ~15 minutes, until golden brown, and then let it rest ~15 minutes before slicing. Divine!
Glaze:
3 tablespoons packed brown sugar
1 ½ tablespoons soy sauce
1 ½ teaspoons dry mustard
1 teaspoon ground ginger

chris kenber

I've followed this recipe for several years and it's excellent. once it's cured i smoke it for about 5 to 6 hours (sort of pastrami?) and then braise it gently in Guinness with assorted root vegetables. but i serve it with colcannon cakes so no cabbage. followed by a Guinness/ chocolate cake from Nigella which is both unusual and delicious. and of course soda bread -- in this case with currants and mixed herbs.

ladyonthesoapbox

I stopped boiling cabbage years ago. Instead, I slice it and stir fry it quickly with a little salt and sugar (very small amount - maybe 1 teaspoon). From Good Housekeepineg cookbook from 40 years ago. Delicious!

Becca

I just dug out my copy of Charcuterie and Ruhlman recommends weighing (rather than using a specific type of salt) & includes weights in the brine recipe there:

1 gallon water
450 grams kosher salt
100 grams sugar
25 grams pink salt
3 cloves garlic
20 grams pickling spices

plus another 20 grams pickling spices for the simmer & no mention of beer or ginger beer.

Good luck!

Sam Sifton

I've used a few different ones. Most recently, one from Medley Hills Farm: Prague Powder Curing Salt #1.

Sunny

Where does one buy sodium nitrite?

Mollyo

There seems to be conflicting research on this. Here is a recently updated review on nitrate/nitrite safety which concludes that current research shows no cancer link. They also mention in the summary that nitrates & nitrites are now considered by some to be "indispensible nutrients essential for cardiovascular health by promoting nitric oxide production." (!) https://www.researchgate.net/publication/230665462_Ingested_nitrate_and_...

Carol

I don't mean to ruffle any feathers ( or get your Irish up!), but I spent 40 years in Texas, so here's my question: why would you want to ruin a perfectly good brisket by turning it into corned beef?

HF

well we eat with our eyes first, and to me at least, need that color for corned beef. Note too that it is nitrite, not nitrate. It also was a godsend in preventing botulism, and it is on the WHO's list of essential medicines. Some chemicals are good, where as some natural substances (arsenic anyone?) aren't. The recipe uses a lot more of another chemical, sodium chloride,. Of course salt, while natural, is also a concern. Moderation in everything, overall, works for me.

Tom H

Gaaak! Way too salty!
Here are some brine concentration percentages for different salt types at this recipes recommended proportions:

Morton Kosher salt:13%
Diamond Kosher salt: 9.5%
Table salt:16%
Pickling salt:15.6%
Fine sea salt:13.7%
So unless you used Diamond, you got too much salt

An online search found that most recipe sites/blogs either copied the NYT brine recipe or Alton Browns's

Alton Brown's brine concentration is: 8.7% (!)
I'm going with Alton next time.

Nicholas Yarmoshuk

5 Tblsp to start
3 Tbsp in Brine
2 Tblsp remainder to be used with beer

Diane

I always make my corned beef in a slow cooker. Add the corned beef to the crock pot with a large can of beer, some pickling spice, a handful of whole black peppercorns and several cloves of garlic. Cook on low for about 4-5 hours. Super easy and super delicious.

Mark

Best of 2 worlds: this approach for curing (but cut salt by almost half). Cured 7 days in a large ziplock bag. Rinsed well, placed in pot, covered with dark lager, ginger beer and water, tossed in some additional pickling spice, brought to SIMMER (not boil) -- then placed pot partly covered in 200F oven for 7-9 hours (method "borrowed" from Kenji Lopez Alt). Let cool to room temp then refrigerated in cooking liquid 2 days. Sliced some thick for dinner, some thin for sandwiches.

Sam Sifton

Yes, use #1, and all will be well. You're only going to cook this thing like once or twice a year.

nancy lengyel

May I leave it in the brine longer than 7 days?

Patti C

Been brining beef for about 6 years. This recipe is not salty and has great flavor!For 5#:3/4 c kosher salt 1/2 c brown sugar2 Tbs Prague #2 powder2 cloves garlic minced3 - 6 qts water, depending on size of beef1/3 cup of pickling spice:2 Tbs black peppercorns 2 Tbs mustard seed2 Tbs coriander seeds2 Tbs red pepper flakes 2 Tbs allspice berries 1 Tbs ground mace2 small cinnamon stick broken into pieces2 Tbs whole cloves1 Tbs ground gingerBrine 7 - 10 days

Sasha

Is there an alternative to pink salt?

RMJ

No need to make a full gallon of brine. I found a cheap 1.1 gallon low-profile red-lid plastic storage container that holds a ten-by-nine inch five-pound brisket. With the raw meat in the container, fill full of water, measure the amount of water, and just make that much brine — it turned out, I think, half a gallon.I used Penzeys corned beef spice mix - grind it before using. Slow cooker low, in 6oz ginger beer 32oz beef broth (the beer I had was too hoppy, high IBU). Beef came out great!

Stephanie Anne

couldn't find curing salt locally so left it out and it turned out great! I used a 3 lb brisket in a gallon ziplock. "good beer" is rather subjective, so I looked up ideas and went with Guinness and a local beer with cocoa and chocolate. Tasted like corned beef! We made the Irish Tacos with it and everyone was happy.

Robyn M

Can I leave out the curing salt? I can’t find it in my local stores and I’m out of time to order it

Jon

I assume this could be done with a smaller, maybe 2-3lb piece? Single diner here! Thanks.

Judith

Can I make this without sodium nitrite? Or is the sodium nitrite an integral part of the pickling process?

Lightbody

Sodium nitrite has anti-bacterial properties, and is used to prevent harmful bacterial growth during corning. So not using it is a bit of a crapshoot with serious consequences... Sodium nitrate (naturally found in celery) isn't anti-bacterial but can work, as it's converted to nitrite by bacteria--but you have less control over the anti-bacterial effectiveness.

gigi

where do you find beef brisket that is not corned (that is the only type I ever see.)?

Lisa Laskin

Once you corn your own beef, you won't go back to the supermarket version

Carajo

This recipe also works well with an eye of round, top/bottom round, or a rump roast.

Tim

Has anyone ever made this without the beer? If so, what did you sub? Want to make this for St. Patty’s Day, but I’m Celiac and can’t have gluten. TIA.

Beth

I’ve made this every year since publication as written & it’s ridiculously delicious- boiled for St Pats day or smoked for pastrami

Vic

Sorry to throw a damper on this but “nitrates” are not the same as “nitrites.” Nitrites have serious health effects. Nitrates, which are far more common, do not. While some vegetables (celery, for example) do contain nitrites naturally, the high dosages of nitrites from cured meats or curing salt far exceeds the naturally occurring amounts. Just be aware of this and use nitrite sparingly. Maybe just for special occasions

Bill

I'm afraid you are correct, Vic, and it is for this reason that my lady and I cannot consume corned beef, or ham, or any sort of cured pork, including those labeled "no nitrates added", but which contain celery powder, which turns into nitrites. She suffers from atrial fibrillation ("a-fib"), and her cardiologist is one of many who warn that nitrites can trigger a-fib episodes. We tried corning beef last year without pink salt. It was disgusting.

Robyn

Excellent recipe! I do soak my fully brined brisket in a pot of water in the refrigerator overnight before draining and cooking the next day. It prevents it from being too salty.

Private notes are only visible to you.

Homemade Corned Beef Recipe (2024)

References

Top Articles
55 Recipes We Stole from the Family Reunion
How To Make Patterned Roll Cake: Recipe & Tutorial
What Did Bimbo Airhead Reply When Asked
WALB Locker Room Report Week 5 2024
NYT Mini Crossword today: puzzle answers for Tuesday, September 17 | Digital Trends
فیلم رهگیر دوبله فارسی بدون سانسور نماشا
Missed Connections Inland Empire
Goodbye Horses: The Many Lives of Q Lazzarus
Evil Dead Rise Showtimes Near Massena Movieplex
Www Movieswood Com
What Happened To Father Anthony Mary Ewtn
Cvs Learnet Modules
Top tips for getting around Buenos Aires
Bowie Tx Craigslist
1v1.LOL - Play Free Online | Spatial
Tamilyogi Proxy
Stardew Expanded Wiki
Jbf Wichita Falls
Nhl Tankathon Mock Draft
Self-Service ATMs: Accessibility, Limits, & Features
Aerocareusa Hmebillpay Com
Sef2 Lewis Structure
[PDF] PDF - Education Update - Free Download PDF
Www Va Lottery Com Result
Villano Antillano Desnuda
Yale College Confidential 2027
Taylored Services Hardeeville Sc
Toonkor211
How to Use Craigslist (with Pictures) - wikiHow
FREE Houses! All You Have to Do Is Move Them. - CIRCA Old Houses
Sf Bay Area Craigslist Com
140000 Kilometers To Miles
Daily Journal Obituary Kankakee
oklahoma city community "puppies" - craigslist
Domino's Delivery Pizza
Powerspec G512
Metra Schedule Ravinia To Chicago
Honda Ruckus Fuse Box Diagram
Page 5662 – Christianity Today
Elisabeth Shue breaks silence about her top-secret 'Cobra Kai' appearance
Legit Ticket Sites - Seatgeek vs Stubhub [Fees, Customer Service, Security]
Blackwolf Run Pro Shop
Go Bananas Wareham Ma
Beaufort SC Mugshots
Quick Base Dcps
Bmp 202 Blue Round Pill
Benjamin Franklin - Printer, Junto, Experiments on Electricity
Oefenpakket & Hoorcolleges Diagnostiek | WorldSupporter
The Quiet Girl Showtimes Near Landmark Plaza Frontenac
sin city jili
Generator für Fantasie-Ortsnamen: Finden Sie den perfekten Namen
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Geoffrey Lueilwitz

Last Updated:

Views: 6409

Rating: 5 / 5 (80 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Geoffrey Lueilwitz

Birthday: 1997-03-23

Address: 74183 Thomas Course, Port Micheal, OK 55446-1529

Phone: +13408645881558

Job: Global Representative

Hobby: Sailing, Vehicle restoration, Rowing, Ghost hunting, Scrapbooking, Rugby, Board sports

Introduction: My name is Geoffrey Lueilwitz, I am a zealous, encouraging, sparkling, enchanting, graceful, faithful, nice person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.