Slow cooking

How to cook beef brisket in a slow cooker

Beef brisket is a cut of meat not often found in Australia but made famous by American cooking shows and situation comedies like Big Bang Theory with Howard banging on about his mother’s brisket.

There are now even American barbeque joints in Australian cities selling ribs and brisket.

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Slow cooker beef brisket with cabbage, potatoes and Brussels sprouts bathing in gravy Gary Lum
Slow cooker beef brisket with cabbage, potatoes and Brussels sprouts bathing in gravy

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Beef brisket in a slow cooker on slow cooker Sunday
Prep Time
10 mins
Cook Time
8 hrs
Total Time
8 hrs 10 mins
 
Beef brisket slowly cooked is a thing of beauty. Here’s how to cook it like a boss. You can’t go wrong in a slow cooker.
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Australian
Servings: 4
Calories: 1000 kcal
Author: Gary Lum
Ingredients
  • 1 kilogram Beef brisket
  • 100 millilitres Spicy barbeque sauce
  • 1 litre Warm water
  • 2 teaspoons Brown sugar
  • ½ cup Red wine vinegar
  • 5 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 teaspoon Chilli flakes
  • 1 teaspoon Garlic powder
  • ½ piece Drumhead cabbage (shredded)
  • 250 grams Brussels sprouts (the baby ones)
  • 2 pieces Potato (halved)
  • 2 tablespoons Butter (room temperature)
  • 2 tablespoons Plain flour
Instructions
  1. To a slow cooker vessel add the Brussels sprouts, potatoes and cabbage. This will keep the meat off the bottom of the vessel.
  2. Add the water, brown sugar, red wine vinegar, Worcestershire sauce, chilli flakes, and garlic powder.
  3. On top of the vegetable trivet, place the meat and then add on top the spicy barbeque sauce.
  4. Place the cooking chamber into the slow cooker, seal the lid and set for 8 hours.
  5. After the timer goes off, turn off the slow cooker, unseal the lid and open the slow cooker. Remove the cooking chamber and remove the meat onto a cutting board. Place the vegetables into a bowl and empty the remaining juice into a jug and work out if it’s worth keeping.
  6. With a sharp cook’s knife, slice the meat into thickish slices for dinner and slice the rest for refrigeration for work lunches.
  7. In a saucepan, make a quick roux with butter and flour and then make a gravy with the leftover juices.
  8. Plate up the vegetables into a shallow bowl, add a few slices of meat and then pour over the gravy.
  9. Shoot a photograph.
  10. Eat the meal and then wash the dishes.
  11. Blog about the meal and hope your friends on social media will share the recipe and make you famous.
Recipe Notes

This is a fabulous meal for a cool or cold autumn or winter Sunday dinner.

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Let me know what you think

If you make this please let me know what you thought of the dish and the recipe?

What are vegetable options could you use?

I did think about serving this will coleslaw but it’s getting into mid-autumn and I need comfort vegetables. I had a friend on Facebook suggest making a vegetable au gratin like a sweet potato au gratin. It can also be done in the slow cooker with aluminium foil (not to my American friends, it’s aluminium).

Can the meat be frozen?

Well, yes it can, preferably vacuum packed to avoid freezer burn and so you can gently heat it up in a warm water bath for a pseudo sous vide meal.

Social media

Please follow me on my food-based social media on TwitterFacebook, and Instagram. What I’d love you to do is share this post on Twitter and Facebook and anywhere else you’d like, even Google+

Do you like nice photographs?

Check out my post from my other blog on reflections on Lake Ginninderra.

Gary Lum QR Code

Slow cooked beef, speck and hot and spicy spam

Slow cooked beef, speck and spam with carrot, celery, onion, sugar snap peas, peas, and broccoli
Slow cooked beef, speck and spam with carrot, celery, onion, sugar snap peas, peas, and broccoli

Slow cooked beef, speck and hot and spicy spam is not something you will find in a lot of cook books. As far as I can see it’s not in my Spam cookbook.

Hawaii Spam Cookbook
Hawaii Spam Cookbook

This weekend I got the slow cooker out and loaded it with some ‘casserole’ beef, speck and some leftover hot and spicy spam along with with celery, carrot and onion. I did this video to practice some video editing in Adobe Photoshop.

Slow cooked beef, speck and hot and spicy spam
Recipe Type: Dinner
Cuisine: Australian
Author: [url href=”http://garylum.me” target=”_blank” rel=”nofollow”]Gary Lum[/url]
Prep time:
Cook time:
Total time:
Serves: 1
Ingredients
  • Casserole beef from Coles
  • Speck from Coles delicatessen
  • Spam (hot and spicy)
  • Celery (3 stalks) finely chopped
  • Carrot (1) diced
  • Onion (½) diced
  • Red wine (1 cup)
  • Beef stock (1 litre)
  • Sugar snap peas
  • Frozen peas
  • Broccoli
  • Dried mixed herbs
  • Salt
  • Pepper
  • Ginger marmalade (1 tablespoon)
  • Plain flour
Instructions
  1. Dice the vegetables (onions, carrot and celery) and meat
  2. Coat the meat in flour
  3. Brown off the meat in some olive oil in a frying pan and then soften the vegetables (onions, carrot and celery) in the frying pan.
  4. Add everything that has been browned or softened to the slow cooker
  5. Deglase the frying pan with a cup of red wine and pour the wine into the slow cooker
  6. Add the stock, ginger marmalade, some salt and pepper plus the dried herbs.
  7. Turn on the slow cooker and cook for 6 hours
  8. Drain the solids and keep the liquid for reducing to a sauce
  9. Aliquot into microwave safe containers for lunch at work
  10. Steam some sugar snap peas, peas and broccoli
  11. Plate up the meal
  12. Shoot a photograph
  13. Eat the meal
  14. Wash the dishes
  15. Write the recipe
  16. Blog (Verb)

I’m trying to teach myself some Adobe Photoshop skills. I video recorded some of my preparation and edited it in Photoshop. You can watch it here. It’s not very interesting and displays that I need to improve my knife skills. I also need to learn more about transitions and making a logo and adding in audio. Oh well, I will try to get better.

Monday link love

These links are from today’s shared posts on the Canberra Food Blogger’s Facebook Group.

I hope you’ve had a great Monday

This is a photograph I shot yesterday. I thought I’d share it because I like it.

Lake Ginninderra reflections
Lake Ginninderra reflections

Slow cooked lamb and pork with red wine and cream reduction

After an amazing breakfast I skipped lunch and had an early dinner

Slow cooked lamb and pork with red wine and cream reduction

This looks horrible but gee it tastes good.

Sunday dinner. Slow cooked lamb and pork in reduced cream and red wine with spinach.
Sunday dinner. Slow cooked lamb and pork in reduced cream and red wine with spinach.
Slow cooked lamb and pork with red wine and cream reduction
 
Recipe Type: Dinner
Cuisine: Australian
Author: Gary Lum
Prep time:
Cook time:
Total time:
Serves: 1
This is a slowly cooked lamb and pork dish that used up left over roast lamb and pork
Ingredients
  • Leftover roast lamb pieces cut into 1 cm³ cubes
  • Leftover roast pork rasher cut into 1 cm³ cubes
  • Frozen spinach cubes
  • Pouring cream
  • Red wine
  • Chilli flakes—As much as your mouth can handle 🙂
  • Black pepper corns—As much as your mouth can handle 😉
Instructions
  1. Place the lamb and pork into a thick based frying pan and set to a low heat
  2. Cook like this for an hour stirring every fifteen minutes to ensure the meat doesn’t stick to the bottom of the flying pan
  3. Add some red wine to cover the meat and simmer to reduce to a sweet slick thick sauce consistency, stirring regularly for about ninety minutes
  4. Add the frozen spinach cubes and chilli flakes and black pepper corns
  5. Add enough cream to lighten the colour and stop bubbles forming
  6. Mix and stir and keep cooking for another fifteen minutes until the cream has reduced and thickened
  7. Transfer the heavenly goodness to a bowl, try to avoid a white one like I did, the colour contrast made photography a nightmare
  8. Capture an image if you can, this was captured on my Nikon D5300 with a Tamron 90 mm MACRO lens at 1/125 seconds, f/7.1 and ISO 1250
  9. Eat the food and enjoy the burning sensation on every mucous membrane of your mouth and tongue
  10. Wash dishes
  11. Write the recipe
  12. Post a blog post
 
Notes
Give it a go and tell me what you think.
Sunday breakfast with Bron. 63 °C egg with parmesan custard and a Pialligo Estate bacon salsa.
Sunday breakfast with Bron. 63 °C egg with parmesan custard and a Pialligo Estate bacon salsa.

 
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