Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts

Mar 14, 2012

McChops

McChops
One of the benefits of creating your own dinner recipe is that you get to name it whatever you want. In the honor of St. Patrick's day and the fact that I am 3/4 Irish, I've called it McChops. Yeah, it is more Italian in flavor for the herbs, and based on the ingredients that are more of a true Irish holiday meat, but sometimes it IS all about me...and I tend to blend flavors together so I can enjoy life on MY terms...

Ingredients
  • 3 slices thick bacon
  • 3 thick cut boneless pork chops
  • 8 oz tomato sauce
  • Italian herb & Old Bay Seasoning mix
Instructions
  1. Preheat the toaster oven to 400 F
  2. Cook the bacon in a skillet until it is cooked but flexible
  3. Mix the Italian herb mix & Old Bay Seasoning with the tomato sauce
  4. Put a couple of tablespoons of the tomato mix into a small casserole dish and spread it around (to prevent sticking of the chops)
  5. Place the 3 chops in the casserole dish
  6. Fold the cooked bacon in half, and lay 1 on top of each of the chop
  7. Pour the tomato sauce over the chops
  8. Cook for 1 hour (or so, check with an instant thermometer to see if it is done)

Mar 13, 2012

Corned Beef & St. Patrick's Day

Corn beef hash including potatoes and carrot.
Corned Beef Hash breakfast via Wikipedia
Something that has been on my mind for a few decades, is why Irish-Americans gravitate to eating corned beef on St. Patrick's Day and drink a lot of green beer. Okay, I understand the green beer part, but I've always wondered about corned beef since I've never eaten it and have received a LOT of junk mail promoting it for breakfast and lunch on St. Patrick's Day. So, I am going to summarize based on these 3 key websites (and yes, this is my bibliography):

The name of corned beef most likely came about when meat was dry-cured with salt in Europe and the Middle East. The word "corn" derives from Old English which describes the meat being dry-cured in CORNS of salt. The pellets of salt were approximately the size of kernels of corn and were rubbed into the meat to keep it from spoiling.

Canned corned beef
Canned Corned Beef via Wikipedia
Irish corned beef was used and traded extensively from the 1600s to the mid 1800s for England and as provisions for the British naval fleets & North American armies due to its non-perishable nature. It was traded to the French for feeding the colonists and slaves in their Caribbean sugar plantations. Corned beef as a commodity started to die out in the mid 1800s when slavery was abolished but it did have a resurgence during World War II in the canned form. Makes me wonder about where Spam started.
During the Great Potato Famine, raising cattle to sustain the British Isle and Atlantic trade crowded out land in Ireland for other agricultural development and prevented the raising of crops to feed the local population. Which is why a ton of people from Ireland emigrated to the U.S. Because beef was less expensive than pork here, that is why the Irish immigrants substituted it in recipes on holidays.

Which leads me to my conclusion. According to all of the research & reading that I've been doing, corned beef on St. Patrick's Day is an Irish-American tradition, not a true Irish national tradition. That's why I haven't had it yet and why I'll be making a bacon joint instead...