St. Patrick’s day was also a day for celebration of
sorts. I had heard of gatherings of
people to eat boiled corned beef brisket, boiled cabbage, boiled potatoes, and
dry soda bread. But we did it a little
different.
My family was a mix of cultures from Europe and a few other
places. My dad’s mother’s dad was an
Irish ‘Adams’ but they had been in America since at least the late 1600’s and
had missed out on developing many Irish (from Ireland) traditions. To mix it up a little, my great-grandfather
was also mixed with some Irish-Mexican and some Irish-Cherokee. Then consider this branch of the family had
been in Texas since the 1820’s.
Overall, my family possessed only a small percentage of Irish in the
mixture, but in Texas it was enough to have at least some kind of a celebration
on St. Patrick’s Day.
Our version of the corned beef brisket was simply to skip
the corning process and just toss a fresh brisket onto the smoker for some
twelve to sixteen hours. During the
last couple of hours a few cabbages made their way onto the smoker also. Potatoes were usually baked or mashed in the
kitchen, and bread was white sandwich bread, crackers, or tortillas. And we mustn’t forget beverages. Depending upon age we drank Dr. Pepper, Big
Red, iced tea, or beer (Lone Star, Pearl, Shiner Bock, or any other Texas
beer).
Over the years I began to appreciate the more traditional
Irish-American approach to the celebration meal, although I never quite made
friends with green beer. I do, however,
like warm brown soda bread with Irish butter.
This is good stuff. Really
good. I find I could eat this stuff
every day, but only if I make it fresh.
Stale Irish soda bread does not make me happy.
Every month the Long Beach Casting Club has a luncheon on
the third Wednesday, and each March we have a traditional Irish-American St.
Patrick’s Day meal of corned beef and cabbage.
I’m not certain, but I think this is the most attended lunch of the
year. Everyone nowadays seems to find a
way to celebrate this most American of Irish days.
I recently was in communication with one of my last
remaining family members who shares the same great-grandfather as me. I asked if he was doing anything special for
the day o’ the green, and he got all excited.
He told me he had just discovered a way to prepare brisket without
firing up the smoker. It’s called ‘corning’. He told me all about it. He told me all about it several times. I suggested he make an extra one just to
smoke after the corning process was over, and he got even more excited. I didn’t tell him it’s been done before, and
it’s called pastrami. I think he’ll
like the results.
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