Corned Beef and Cabbage Hash
By Mark HuxsollPublished on December 20, 2020
Time
1 hour
Yield
Serves 4 to 6
Ingredients
Before You Begin
Corned beef is sold both raw and fully cooked. Purchase fully cooked corned beef from the deli counter––ask the butcher to slice it ½ inch thick. You can also use cooked corned beef left over from a boiled dinner. About one-quarter of a head of green cabbage will yield 3 cups. Serve with hot sauce and a fried egg, if desired.
Instructions
- Toss potatoes, beef, cabbage, onion, carrots, oil, garlic, thyme, pepper, mustard, salt, and allspice together in large bowl. Transfer mixture to 12-inch nonstick skillet and set over medium heat (skillet will be very full, but contents will cook down). Cover and cook until potatoes are tender, 15 to 20 minutes, stirring occasionally.
- Remove skillet from heat and, using potato masher, mash ingredients into coarse, cohesive mass. Spread corned beef mixture into even layer and place butter pieces along sides of skillet all around hash. Return to medium heat and cook, uncovered and undisturbed, until well browned on bottom, 5 to 7 minutes.
- Flip spatula-size portions of hash and lightly repack in skillet. Cook until browned on second side, about 2 minutes. Flip again and brown bottom once more, about 2 minutes. Serve.
Time
1 hourYield
Serves 4 to 6Ingredients
Ingredients
Ingredients
Why This Recipe Works
We wanted a recipe for this diner staple that was easy to make in every home kitchen. In a large bowl we tossed together ½-inch cubes of cooked corned beef from the deli counter; unpeeled russet potatoes; and carrots, which offered pretty pops of color. We also added shredded cabbage and sliced onion and combined the entire mixture with garlic, thyme, a few spices, and vegetable oil. We transferred the contents of the bowl to a nonstick skillet and cooked them, covered, until the potatoes were tender. We then removed the skillet from the heat and mashed the ingredients into a solid mass with a potato masher. After adding little nubs of butter all around the sides, we returned the skillet to the heat to brown the hash. Flipping the hash in sections with a spatula gave us control over how much browning was achieved and allowed browning on both sides. The finished hash was bound by creamy potatoes and woven in a web of cabbage, with salty, tender corned beef and subtly sweet carrots in every bite.
Before You Begin
Corned beef is sold both raw and fully cooked. Purchase fully cooked corned beef from the deli counter––ask the butcher to slice it ½ inch thick. You can also use cooked corned beef left over from a boiled dinner. About one-quarter of a head of green cabbage will yield 3 cups. Serve with hot sauce and a fried egg, if desired.
Instructions
- Toss potatoes, beef, cabbage, onion, carrots, oil, garlic, thyme, pepper, mustard, salt, and allspice together in large bowl. Transfer mixture to 12-inch nonstick skillet and set over medium heat (skillet will be very full, but contents will cook down). Cover and cook until potatoes are tender, 15 to 20 minutes, stirring occasionally.
- Remove skillet from heat and, using potato masher, mash ingredients into coarse, cohesive mass. Spread corned beef mixture into even layer and place butter pieces along sides of skillet all around hash. Return to medium heat and cook, uncovered and undisturbed, until well browned on bottom, 5 to 7 minutes.
- Flip spatula-size portions of hash and lightly repack in skillet. Cook until browned on second side, about 2 minutes. Flip again and brown bottom once more, about 2 minutes. Serve.
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