St. Patrick's Day
Replies
-
personally no, but if you check out food.com they have a section of st patricks day recipes, im sure you will find one in there you would like to try0
-
Thanks0
-
Beer
Whiskey0 -
Beer
Whiskey
Don't forget potatos ;-)0 -
Take a small shot glass and carefully layer creme de menthe, baileys and southern comfort in that order.
Tricolour shot and it's surprisingly tasty.
Altenatively throw some minced beef, potatoes, sausages, carrots, onions, spring onions and steak pieces in a big pot, top up with some water and some stock, let it cook on a very low heat for about 5 hours and serve in a bowl with a nice crusty bread and real butter. Proper Irish Stew.0 -
green dye,,,, put it in everything that day, heee..0
-
Take a small shot glass and carefully layer creme de menthe, baileys and southern comfort in that order.
Tricolour shot and it's surprisingly tasty.
Altenatively throw some minced beef, potatoes, sausages, carrots, onions, spring onions and steak pieces in a big pot, top up with some water and some stock, let it cook on a very low heat for about 5 hours and serve in a bowl with a nice crusty bread and real butter. Proper Irish Stew.
thanks!0 -
0
-
those look good0 -
The bonus there is, I am actually Irish in Ireland, so I can guarantee authenticity.0
-
This isn't my mother's recipe, but Irish Soda Bread is a must with your corned beef and cabbage (one of two things I've missed in twenty years of not eating meat :sad: ).
http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/ina-garten/irish-soda-bread-recipe/index.html0 -
The bonus there is, I am actually Irish in Ireland, so I can guarantee authenticity.
I'm impressed I'm 1/4 Irish heritage, American.0 -
This isn't my mother's recipe, but Irish Soda Bread is a must with your corned beef and cabbage (one of two things I've missed in twenty years of not eating meat :sad: ).
http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/ina-garten/irish-soda-bread-recipe/index.html
Soda bread is God's way of making up for TV Talent shows. Fantastic. Have it toasted and buttered with a fried egg on top.0 -
alcohol the key to all great Irish parties.... wiskey, beer, irish coffees ect ......
food wise Irish stew, Guinness stews and pies, soda bread, cottage pies, scones (not an american scone proper sweet ones full o cherries or whatever)0 -
Oh and...I have no idea if this is specifically Irish, but it is another one of my mother's favorites: Creamed Eggs on Toast.
I Googled it and found this, but my mom's has peas in it. http://www.littlemissmomma.com/2011/11/creamed-eggs-over-toast-recipe-holy-cow.html
You will have died and gone to heaven. It will save your hangover. Here is a recent pic of how to do it right (yeah, I baked that bread from scratch... :blushing:).
IMG_1790 by LaNatalie, on Flickr
IMG_1791 by LaNatalie, on Flickr
IMG_1576 by LaNatalie, on Flickr0 -
If you want trad Irish you need to be eating boiled bacon with the cabbage not corned beef !!
Boil the bacon .. then boil the cabbage in the bacon water and if you're brave enough drink the water afterwards like we had to as kids !
Don't forget the spuds .. boiled of course !
This is how we had it at home every week and my parents and family are from Galway.0 -
If you want trad Irish you need to be eating boiled bacon with the cabbage not corned beef !!
Boil the bacon .. then boil the cabbage in the bacon water and if you're brave enough drink the water afterwards like we had to as kids !
Don't forget the spuds .. boiled of course !
This is how we had it at home every week and my parents and family are from Galway.
I wouldn't say bacon is more traditional. Corned beef was just a delicacy that the British sucked out of Ireland.
"The appearance of corned beef in Irish cuisine dates to the 12th century in the poem Aislinge Meic Con Glinne or The Vision of MacConglinne.[17] Within the text, it is described as a delicacy a king uses to purge himself of the "demon of gluttony". Cattle, valued as a bartering tool, were only eaten when no longer able to provide milk or to work. The corned beef as described in this text was a rare and valued dish, given the value and position of cattle within the culture, as well as the expense of salt, and was unrelated to the corned beef eaten today.[8]
During the time of the Great Frost, a particularly cold spring drought in 1740 made it difficult to raise enough cattle for food or work. Many cattle in the south of Ireland died amid the harsh weather conditions. Cattle that survived and were suitable for food were exported to England"
"8th-century Atlantic trade
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.[3] The product was also traded to the French for use in Caribbean sugar plantations as sustenance for the colonist and the slave laborers. [4] 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.[4][5] 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.[4] 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.[4]
Ireland produced a significant amount of the corned beef in the Atlantic trade from local cattle and salt imported from the Iberian Peninsula and southwestern France.[4] Coastal cities, such as Dublin, Belfast, and Cork, created vast beef curing and packing industries, with Cork producing half of Ireland's annual beef exports in 1668.[5] Although the production and trade of corned beef as a commodity was a source of great wealth for the colonial nations of England and France (who were participating in the Atlantic slave trade), in the colonies themselves the product was looked upon with disdain due to its association with poverty and slavery.[4]
Increasing corned beef production to satisfy the rising populations of the industrialised areas of Great Britain and Atlantic trade worsened the effects of the Irish Famine and the Great Potato Famine:
The Celtic grazing lands of...Ireland had been used to pasture cows for centuries. The British colonized...the Irish, transforming much of their countryside into an extended grazing land to raise cattle for a hungry consumer market at home...The British taste for beef had a devastating impact on the impoverished and disenfranchised people of...Ireland. Pushed off the best pasture land and forced to farm smaller plots of marginal land, the Irish turned to the potato, a crop that could be grown abundantly in less favorable soil. Eventually, cows took over much of Ireland, leaving the native population virtually dependent on the potato for survival.
—Jeremy Rifkin, Beyond Beef[6]
Despite being a major producer of beef, most of the people of Ireland during this period consumed little of the meat produced, in either fresh or salted form, due to its prohibitive cost. This was because most of the farms and its produce were owned by wealthy English landlords and that most of the population were from families of poor tenant farmers, and that most of the corned beef was exported.
The lack of beef or corned beef in the Irish diet is especially true in Northern Ireland and areas away from the major centres for corned beef production. However, individuals living in these production centres such as Cork did consume the product to a certain extent. The majority of Irish that resided in Ireland at the time mainly consumed dairy and meats such as pork or salt pork.[5]"0 -
If you want trad Irish you need to be eating boiled bacon with the cabbage not corned beef !!
Boil the bacon .. then boil the cabbage in the bacon water and if you're brave enough drink the water afterwards like we had to as kids !
Don't forget the spuds .. boiled of course !
This is how we had it at home every week and my parents and family are from Galway.
I wouldn't say bacon is more traditional. Corned beef was just a delicacy that the British sucked out of Ireland.
Yep well that would account for why most Irish families would likely not be eating corned beef !!
I have never yet met anyone within my family and friends who would eat anything other than bacon with cabbage ... so start boiling and don't forget to drink the water :laugh:0 -
Corned beef wasn't a delicacy, it was cheap!
Lots of good recipes on Pinterest. I hate corned beef, so we're doing prime rib. I'm also doing Guinness Beef Stew, and Irish Car Bombs for shots. Other people will bring other stuff.0 -
I made a Guiness Milkshake once! I took a photo but I'm not sure how to post it on the message board x0
-
Stop murdering good Guinness just drink it :sad:0
-
I got this off a website, and I've made it before. It's soo good...especially if you like Pistachio like I do. The "crust" is from oreos, which is also another one of my favorites I posted the nutritional information below for anyone that wants that information.
Pistachio Bar Dessert
Time Prep:
20 minutes
Total Time:
4 hr 20 min
Servings Total:
32 servings
What You Need:
36 OREO Cookies, finely crushed (about 3 cups)
6 Tbsp. butter or margarine, melted
2pkg. (3.4 oz. each) JELL-O Pistachio Flavor Instant Pudding
2cups cold milk
1tub (8 oz.) COOL WHIP Whipped Topping, thawed, divided
1/2cup toffee bits
Directions:
MIX cookie crumbs and butter until blended; press onto bottom of 13x9-inch pan. Refrigerate until ready to use.
BEAT pudding mixes and milk in large bowl with whisk 2 min.; spread 1-1/2 cups onto crust. Stir half the COOL WHIP into remaining pudding; spread over pudding layer in pan. Cover with remaining COOL WHIP.
REFRIGERATE 4 hours or until firm. Sprinkle with toffee bits just before serving.
Nutrional Information (per servings)-
Calories 150
Total fat 7 g
Saturated fat 4 g
Cholesterol 5 mg
Sodium 180 mg
Carbohydrate 19 g
Dietary fiber 0 g
Sugars 13 g
Protein 1 g0 -
I've never made Corned Beef and Cabbage, I leave that to my parents and I go to their house for St. Patricks Day dinner, but this year I'm going to try to make it myself in the crock pot with this recipe, looks easy enough! (But I'm still going to their house to have it too heheh)
Crock Pot Corned Beef and Cabbage with Herbed Butter Potatoes
Total Time: 8 hr 10 minutes
Makes 4 servings
Ingredients-
Corned Beef:
3 pounds corned beef brisket with spice packet
2 carrots, cut into 2-inch pieces
2 medium onions, chopped
1 small head green cabbage, cored, roughly chopped
2 cups apple juice
1 cup water
Potatoes:
1 1/2 pounds baby red potatoes, sliced in 1/2
1/2 stick butter, softened
1 tablespoon chopped garlic
2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley leaves
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
Directions-
For Corned Beef:
Put the carrots and onions on the bottom of slow cooker, and put the corned beef on top. Arrange the chopped cabbage around the beef. Add the apple juice and 1 cup of water along with the contents of the spice packet. Cook on low 6 to 8 hours until the beef is tender. Remove the beef and vegetables to a platter and keep warm.
For potatoes:
Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil and add the potatoes. Cook until the potatoes are tender, about 12 to 15 minutes. Drain and return them to the pot.
Add the butter, garlic, parsley, and salt, and pepper, to taste. Gently combine so that all the potatoes are evenly coated. Transfer to a serving bowl and serve with corn beef and vegetables from the slow cooker.0 -
I feckin HATE cabbage.0
-
I wonder what the calorie count is in the receipe did you figure that part out. Thanks0
-
I wonder what the calorie count is in the receipe did you figure that part out. Thanks
The numbers are going to vary depending on the brand of food you use...so I don't know if you still want me to count it with what I use?0 -
If you want trad Irish you need to be eating boiled bacon with the cabbage not corned beef !!
Boil the bacon .. then boil the cabbage in the bacon water and if you're brave enough drink the water afterwards like we had to as kids !
Don't forget the spuds .. boiled of course !
This is how we had it at home every week and my parents and family are from Galway.
I wouldn't say bacon is more traditional. Corned beef was just a delicacy that the British sucked out of Ireland.
Yep well that would account for why most Irish families would likely not be eating corned beef !!
I have never yet met anyone within my family and friends who would eat anything other than bacon with cabbage ... so start boiling and don't forget to drink the water :laugh:
Look, my mother is from Ireland and wouldn't have her family recipe any other way. It's your use of the word "traditional" that is troubling. Just because something at one time wasn't plentiful where you family was from and they subbed something else, doesn't mean that roast beef wouldn't be traditional elsewhere. That's like saying in America thin crust pizza is traditional and Chicago style isn't. It would be an inaccurate statement because different regions have vastly different traditional cuisine. I didn't say no one does it with bacon--I said corned beef is also traditional and actually has significantly deeper historic roots--then I actually provided evidence of that.
Other poster--no, it wasn't cheep (as demonstrated by the problem with supply and demand).0 -
Here is a recipe for a Corned Beef and Cabbage Soup, the sodium for this says 782 mg. Here is the link for that recipe, it's from that SkinnyTaste website, the soup looks soo good!
http://www.skinnytaste.com/2012/03/corned-beef-and-cabbage-soup.html
Then I also found this recipe, but it says it has 819.4 mg of sodium, but it's actually cornbeef and cabbage and it isn't a soup. It says that this recipe is one of the lower sodium recipes for cornbeef and cabbage:
http://recipes.sparkpeople.com/recipe-detail.asp?recipe=2563190 -
All I know is the cabbage is nasty! So don't add any to my corned beef, please!0
-
I feckin HATE cabbage.
:drinker:0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.3K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 424 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions