Brisket!
Parks
Broadway Legend Joined: 10/5/04
Parks
Broadway Legend Joined: 10/5/04
#37brisket!
Posted: 9/30/08 at 6:50pmMy mother, the non-cook, actually makes a VERY good brisket. She browns it! She uses a very heavy aluminum stock pot with oil and a little flour and stands each end in it for a couple minutes searing it on each side. Then into the oven in a roasting pan with all of the veggies. Delish.
#38brisket!
Posted: 9/30/08 at 6:56pm
I just put mine in the oven about an hour ago.
2-1/2 pound flat cut brisket
1 can cream of mushroom soup
1 envelope dry onion soup mix
1/4 cup sherry
Mix the soups and sherry in a bowl until blended. Take a LARGE piece of foil, large enough to hold the brisket and seal up completely on all sides like a packet (I double the foil). Place about 1/3 of soup mixture on bottom of foil. Place brisket on top. Spread rest of soup mixture on top of brisket and seal foil around it. The idea is to make it as tight as possible so nothing leaks out. Place packet in baking dish. Bake at 325 for two and a half to three hours. Remove from oven and open foil packet. Transfer meat to serving platter and gravy to serving bowl. Serve with kasha and green peas.
That's our traditional Rosh Hashana dinner. There's also crown challa with honey and Lekach (chocolate honey cake) for dessert.
#40brisket!
Posted: 9/30/08 at 7:19pm
We ALWAYS make brisket in our slow cooker, and it's ALWAYS delicious. Make a rub from the following:
2 teaspoons salt
2 teaspoons dry mustard
2 teaspoons paprika
1/8 teaspoon pepper
1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
Rub onto the brisket, then cook on low for 8-10 hours in a slow cooker, depending on the size of the meat.
#41brisket!
Posted: 9/30/08 at 9:35pm
I was just thinking that when I make my brisket, it always is brown. If I remember correctly, it cooks for a total of at least 2-3 hours. And it makes a dark brown gravy. the whole thing is dark!!!
No, it doesn't taste like pastrami. It tastes like delicious brown meat that's very tender and juicy. Like short ribs.
#44brisket!
Posted: 10/1/08 at 9:50amI use the method Stockard discovered. I have a cast-iron pot with a lid. I brown the roast in oil on the stovetop on all four sides (only takes about 3 minutes per side), then bang it in the oven with chopped onions and carrots and some sort of liquid: wine, beer, canned tomatoes . . .
#46brisket!
Posted: 10/1/08 at 10:18am
No, I do the potatoes separately. The carrots and onions actually impart flavor to the beef.
I have on occasion roasted other vegetables separately (carrots, onions, leeks, potatoes). Then I blended the beefy c's and o's from the roasting pan into a sauce. Yummers!
#47brisket!
Posted: 10/1/08 at 10:43am
OY VEY, I found my old recipe from my aunt. You aren't going to believe how simple it is-and the brisket is DELICIOUS! Ready?
Oy, you just put the meat in some tin foil, cover the meat with one package of Lipton's onion soup mix, wrap up the meat tightly, cook in oven one hour, take out and slice. Put back in oven for another 2 hours till soft.
I read on line that the first cut brisket is not the best to use, contrary to popular opinion. It's too lean. I'm thinking of getting second cut today. If I ever get dressed.
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