https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/IMG_5282.jpg
600
600
Miss South
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2014-North-South-star-logo-remix-final-master.png
Miss South2014-12-05 13:03:492014-12-05 13:03:49Brixton Spiced Beef
Slow Cooker Caramel Coconut Jam
Theoretically I have the most fantastic simple slow cooker…
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/NHS-Menue.jpg
600
600
Miss South
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2014-North-South-star-logo-remix-final-master.png
Miss South2014-11-27 13:06:202014-11-27 13:25:45Health Food
Slow Cooker Thanksgiving Dressing
There are many examples of Britain and America being divided…
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/halwa-cake.jpg
535
600
Miss South
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2014-North-South-star-logo-remix-final-master.png
Miss South2014-11-09 00:03:182014-11-09 13:15:56Slow Cooker Carrot Halwa Cake
Slow Cooked and Wrinkled Potatoes
This year, the big date in my diary hasn't been my birthday or…

Shooting ‘Slow Cooked’
Mr North shows some behind-the-scenes photography for the ‘Slow Cooked’ book, and shares the process of bringing these personal, beautiful recipes & exciting flavours to life.
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/slow-cookers.jpg
450
600
Miss South
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2014-North-South-star-logo-remix-final-master.png
Miss South2014-10-26 00:07:032014-10-25 15:14:06Slow Cooker Matchmaking
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/book-cover.jpg
600
600
Miss South
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2014-North-South-star-logo-remix-final-master.png
Miss South2014-10-19 00:19:592014-10-25 15:16:35Creating Slow Cooked
Slow Cooker Pig Cheek Ragu
There is always room in my life for pig on a plate. From bacon,…
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/boxty-2.jpg
450
600
Miss South
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2014-North-South-star-logo-remix-final-master.png
Miss South2014-10-05 00:25:172014-10-24 01:43:18Brixton Boxty
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/pork-fillet-plums-tweaked21.jpg
468
600
Miss South
https://www.northsouthfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2014-North-South-star-logo-remix-final-master.png
Miss South2014-09-21 00:13:282015-01-10 20:25:34Pork, Plums and Fodmaps
Pastrami
/in Eating in, experimental, Good value, Local, Northern, Recipes, Savoury, Simple/by Miss SouthPastrami is beef brisket, brined and cured, then rubbed with spices and smoked until cooked. It’s also known as the finest sandwich filling around and something you always want more of so having a great big hunk of it in the fridge as cold cuts when you’re off work is just ideal. I’d actually never cooked with brisket before, but Mister North’s superlative spiced beef at Christmas had piqued my interest and I was just waiting to get my hands on one. And thanks to Becs over at Lay The Table alerting me to the presence of Farmison and their grass fed, higher welfare standard meat by mail order, I ordered a 2kg beauty on a Tuesday evening and had it ready for its brine bath by Thursday tea time which impressed me greatly and I’ll certainly be using them again for things my butcher can’t get me easily.
Pastrami
If your brisket comes in one of those meat hairnets, remove that now, but keep the string around it to keep the brisket shaped and rolled. Rub a handful of the salt over the meat while you dissolve the rest of the salt, the sugar and the saltpetre in the hot water. Give the spices a bash to release their oils and flavours and add to the water. Bruise the garlic cloves to release the flavours and put them and the thyme into a deep tupperware and put the meat in and pour the brine you’ve just made over the meat. Seal it up and leave it in the fridge for up to five days, but a minimum of two.
The meat will still have a pinkish tinge when you take it out of the brine so don’t worry, it’s quite safe to cook. The meat needs to be smoked to give that proper pastrami feel so there are two ways you can do it. If the weather is nice, you can use the barbecue or you can do it in the oven, but either way you’ll need wood chips to impart the smokiness that lifts this from just being beef. Don’t forget to rub a crust of ground coriander seeds and cracked black pepper over the top of the meat first.
I started mine off on the barbecue using the indirect method where the charcoal is on either side of the grill and the meat is in the middle in the coolest spot so that it cooks without getting that charred exterior that direct cooking gives. I added pecan wood chips that I had soaked first and I got a fairly good smoke on but the charcoal went out about two hours in and since I don’t have a meat thermometer, I couldn’t tell if the meat was cooked so I popped in the oven to finish off. I put the rest of the wood chips in a dispable foil tray and put the meat above them on a trivet, then covered it all with foil and slow cooked it for 90 minutes at 150℃. The moisture from the wood chips steams the meat so it doesn’t dry out, but keep an eye and make sure they don’t lose moisture themselves. You might need to top up.
Once you’ve let the meat cool down then you can congratulate yourself. You’ve just made pastrami from scratch! It’s as simple as that. Now serve it either slightly warmed (pop it back in the oven to heat gently) or at room temperature for a stunning picnic lunch. I made mini pretzel rolls and bagels from Dan Lepard’s excellent recipe and heaped them high with gherkins and mustard on the side and it all seemed to go down marvellously, fortifying us well to sit through four hours of Eurovision, but leaving me with a goodly amount of leftovers for cold cuts in the warm weather. Don’t delay and you could be seeing in the oh so British Jubilee next week with some very American pastrami!