SWMBO makes a cracking corned beef hash in our slow cooker love the stuff after a cold day at work in the winter months.
Without the gerkins nasty orrible things they areIn a sandwich, Granary bread with English mustard and gerkins. Cold or pan fried first.
I believe the tinned corn beef are hearts which I love in the slow cooker.Oh oh! I have a thing for this. Hell yeah. So in my career as a chef I've spent a lot of time specializing in charcuterie and food preservation techniques along with the normal day to day gaffs of cooking. making *proper* corned beef is an absolute passion of mine. These are from my most recent corned beef brisket.
Been reading about quick cures for bacon, it's ironic that they use sodium nitrite for humanely dispatching feral pigs. It kills them within 2 hours of eating the bait. They fall asleep and don't wake up again.My neighbour had a small aquarium where his kids had put some tadpoles they'd caught. He crumbled a bit of corned beef in there to feed them and they exploded.
Many corned beef brands contain Sodium Nitrite.
On the one hand:
Sodium nitrite is a multifunctional food additive, responsible for the characteristic color and flavor associated with cured meats and, at the same time, providing protection against growth and toxin formation by C. botulinum in cured meats subjected to temperature abuse.
On the other
Sodium nitrite is a powerful oxidizing agent that causes hypotension and limits oxygen transport and delivery in the body through the formation of methemoglobin. Clinical manifestations can include cyanosis, hypoxia, altered consciousness, dysrhythmias, and death.
I can attest to the latter having eaten a whole can at a single sitting when I was at uni. I thought I was going to die. But I didn't so I spent the afternoon at Tower Records instead.
I believe the tinned corn beef are hearts which I love in the slow cooker.
Been reading about quick cures for bacon, it's ironic that they use sodium nitrite for humanely dispatching feral pigs. It kills them within 2 hours of eating the bait. They fall asleep and don't wake up again.
For us humans, we eat plenty through eating our veg, especially celery. So is it the processed meat that is harmful or sodium nitrite? And why does the meat have to be heated to 60C when nitrite has been used as a preserver? I am sticking with table salt and curing for a bit longer until I have learned more.
Oh oh! I have a thing for this. Hell yeah. So in my career as a chef I've spent a lot of time specializing in charcuterie and food preservation techniques along with the normal day to day gaffs of cooking. making *proper* corned beef is an absolute passion of mine. These are from my most recent corned beef brisket.
I need to read more about sodium nitrate as well then @foxy @An Ankoù , UK corned beef can be eaten unheated. The canned version as opposed to the sliced version cut up thick and grilled with melted cheese on top smothered in beans in a burger is a delight.I believe the tinned corn beef are hearts which I love in the slow cooker.
Been reading about quick cures for bacon, it's ironic that they use sodium nitrite for humanely dispatching feral pigs. It kills them within 2 hours of eating the bait. They fall asleep and don't wake up again.
For us humans, we eat plenty through eating our veg, especially celery. So is it the processed meat that is harmful or sodium nitrite? And why does the meat have to be heated to 60C when nitrite has been used as a preserver? I am sticking with table salt and curing for a bit longer until I have learned more.
The corned beef is cooked so I don't think there is anything to worry about there. I haven't got a can so can't see what is in it, If it is canned it shouldn't need a preservative should it?
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