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Irish Spiced Beef

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Submitted by kboully

Irish spiced beef: traditional dry-cured Christmas beef with cloves, mace, bay leaves, and brown sugar. Seven-day cure, slow boil, and pressed cold for sliced cold cuts.

YIELD

8 servings

PREP

7 days

COOK

5 hrs

READY

7 days

Irish spiced beef is the centerpiece of Christmas in Cork and Limerick: a slow-cured roast that takes seven days to make and reads like a recipe from a 17th-century farmhouse cookbook. It’s a labor of love, but the result is unlike anything else, a deeply spiced cold cut that gets thinly sliced and served on Boxing Day buffets with Irish soda bread and pickles.

The technique is true dry curing. Salt, saltpeter (potassium nitrate for color and preservation), brown sugar, cloves, mace, and garlic rub into the meat each day for a week. The salt draws out moisture, the spices penetrate, and the saltpeter keeps the cooked meat that signature pink rather than gray. Keep it cool but not refrigerated, the way traditional larders worked.

Day seven is the cook day. Five hours of gentle simmering in water transforms the dense cured beef into something fork-tender. Then comes the unusual finishing touch: pressing the cooked meat under a board with weights as it cools. This compresses the texture, making it easy to slice paper-thin for the cold cut presentation.

Serve cold, sliced thin, on dark bread with a smear of mustard. Genuinely worth the wait.

Pro Tips

  • Saltpeter is hard to find. Check butcher supply shops or substitute with curing salt (Prague Powder #1).
  • Keep the curing meat at 40-50°F (4-10°C). A cool pantry or basement works if you don’t have a curing chamber.
  • Press with a heavy weight (cans, brick, dumbbells) for 4-6 hours minimum.
  • The full 5-hour simmer is necessary for proper tenderness. Don’t rush it.

Variations

  • Add 1 tablespoon of black peppercorns and 1 teaspoon of allspice to the cure for extra complexity.
  • Use brisket, round, or silverside (rump) cuts. All work, but brisket is most traditional.
  • Serve with horseradish cream, hot mustard, or pickled red cabbage on the side.

Ingredients

6 ½ 2.9
POUNDS KG BEEF
3 3
EACH BAY LEAVES *
10 10
EACH CLOVES *
5 5
EACH EACH MACE
blades *
1
X GARLIC CLOVES
crushed, to taste *
¼ 59
CUP ML BROWN SUGAR *
1 453.6
POUND G SALT
1 ½ 23
TABLESPOONS ML SALT PETER *
1 1
BUNCH BUNCH HERB
fresh *
3 3
EACH CARROTS
sliced
3 3
EACH ONIONS
sliced

Directions

NOTE: prepare 7 days in advance of eating!

Wipe meat over with a damp cloth.

Mix seasoning ingredients together except for carrots, onions and fresh herbs.

Rub seasoning well into meat; then lay mean on bed of seasoning.

Leave in a cool place (preferably not refrigerated, though).

Repeat rubbing each day.

On the seventh day, put the meat into a saucepan and cover with cold water.

Bring to boiling point and simmer gently for 5 hours, when it should be tender.

Put cooked meat on a flat dish and cover with a board.

Set weight on top of board until meat is cold, when it is ready to carve and eat.

* not incl. in nutrient facts Arrow up button

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Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 490g (17.3 oz)
Amount per Serving
Calories 1051 58% from fat
 % Daily Value *
Total Fat 67g 103%
Saturated Fat 27g 133%
Trans Fat 0g
Cholesterol 317mg 106%
Sodium 22245mg 927%
Total Carbohydrate 2g 2%
Dietary Fiber 1g 5%
Sugars g
Protein 198g
Vitamin A 77% Vitamin C 7%
Calcium 6% Iron 57%
* based on a 2,000 calorie diet How is this calculated?
Trans-fat Free, Low Carb
 

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