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Food

Beefing up on an old favourite

One of our much-loved comfort foods is enjoying a Renaissance. We ask some chefs for their curing tips

March 5, 2015 14:53
05032015 SALT BEEF

ByAnthea Gerrie, Anthea Gerrie

3 min read

There can be precious few places where Jewish and Irish cuisines converge, but for both cultures, one dish is paramount. As St Patrick's Day approaches, the Irish are looking forward to a traditional festive treat Ashkenazi Jews enjoy year round - succulent salt beef, aromatic, prettily pink and unashamedly fatty.

It's almost certainly poverty that led the famine-prone Irish and the Jews of Eastern Europe to salt their beef as a way of preserving it, originally by rubbing cuts of meat with dry salt with grains the size of corn kernels. This is why Americans call salt beef corned beef, a name which invokes a much dryer and less palatable tinned product, popular in the era of austerity on this side of the pond.

Poverty would also have driven the choice of brisket for salting, a fatty shoulder cut which is tough unless cooked long and slow, when the fat melts into the sinews and makes the whole joint moist and tasty. These days, the salting is more often achieved by soaking the joint for four to seven days in a spiced brine before cooking, and silverside sometimes replaces the brisket. That pink colour comes from the addition of curing salt, and is not compulsory, though it does make the cooked beef look more appetising.

The days when really good salt beef could be picked up all over London's East and West End are gone - which explains the long queues at the Beigel Bake in Brick Lane, and the continuing popularity of the Brass Rail at Selfridges, both famous for their heaped sandwiches. But now there is a new kid on the block, who weekly sells out of salt beef even though, based in Southwark, he is far away from traditional centres of Jewish, or, indeed, Irish culture. Monty's Deli was born in the railway arch where Mark Ogus makes an appearance on weekends only to sell his home-made salt beef and pastrami - and foodie bloggers have reported needing to be there by breakfast time to be sure of getting a sandwich.