I’ve followed Charcutepalooza since it’s inception. As a matter of fact my company, Kinetic Webs, is a sponsor, assisting Cathy (MrsWheelbarrow.com) and Kim (The Yummy Mummy) with all things web related. As a sponsor I can’t participate in the quest for prizes but thought I might try the occasional challenge. What is Charcutepalooza you say? It’s a bunch of crazy (good crazy) people who have decided to participate in a year long journey of preparing their own charcuterie and you can follow them on Twitter using the #Charcutepalooza hashtag.
Charcuterie is a culinary specialty that originally referred to the creation of pork products such as salami, sausages, and prosciutto. It is true food craftsmanship, the art of turning preserved food into items of beauty and taste. Today the term encompasses a vast range of preparations, most of which involve salting, cooking, smoking, and drying. In addition to providing classic recipes for sausages, terrines, and patés, Michael Ruhlman and Brian Polcyn have expanded the definition to include anything preserved or prepared ahead such as Mediterranean olive and vegetable rillettes, duck confit, pickles and sauerkraut. The group as a whole is trekking through this journey using Michael’s book, ‘Charcuterie: The Craft of Salting, Smoking and Curing.’ I don’t have the book yet so I was lucky to find that Michael has the process on his website so I’ve jumped in with this challenge and that book order has been made. The effort was easy and the results so worth it!
Photo by Donna – www.ruhlman.com
See that beautiful brining liquid…that is the secret. Though I’ve always enjoyed corned beef; seasoning the brine yourself gives you some control over the magic and the outcome is nothing less than amazing compared to what you know. I’ve taken the liberty of using a photo of the brine taken by Michael’s wife Donna. I only wish my nails were so nicely groomed! I’ve been a fan of Michael’s for a long time though in the spirit of full disclosure I must admit part of that was simply because he was the cute guy on Iron Chef! But I’m open to seeing beyond that pretty face and love his blog, the conversations that ensue and am enjoying, with his assistance along with the rest of the Charcutepaloozans, this venture into something I would have never once considered doing before. Next week? Hold on kids…I’m making bacon!
I made the corned beef knowing I would be making Reuben sandwiches. After making the corned beef, Russian dressing and the side dish of coleslaw I was assembling the ingredients and grilling this sandwich that was almost a week in the making. I wondered if any sandwich could be worth the time and the mess in my kitchen. I decided to take a break and watch TV for a bit and enjoy my lunch. Did you hear the noise I made? I mean I know I made a literal noise, not a grunt, not a yum, maybe a bit of a moan and I know anyone listening would have recognized it as the sound of absolute nirvana. ABSOLUTELY worth it!
Though I pride myself on always mixing it up a bit when I cook from a recipe, this is verbatim; why mess with success (or the complete unknown)? So I followed Michael’s recipe and directions to the letter…and was lucky to have a Twitter friend @nickelmoon (Sharon to earthlings) even send me some pink salt to use.
I must note…I bought a lot of new spices for the pickling spice mixture because I had ground spices and not seeds. I did not note until later that they were all ground together. So substitute in your ground spices and don’t make the same mistake I did!
Home-Cured Corned Beef

Summary: A home made corned beef is used for a Reuben Sandwich
Prep Time: 30 minutes (does not include time spent brining which is 5 days)
Cooking Time: 3 Hours 15 minutes total or overnight in the crockpot
Total time: 3 hours 45 (minutes
Ingredients
For Brine
- 1 ½ cups kosher salt
- ½ cup sugar
- 4 teaspoons pink salt (sodium nitrite), optional
- 3 cloves garlic, minced
- 4 tablespoons pickling spice
- 1 5-pound beef brisket
For Cooking
- 1 carrot, peeled and roughly chopped
- 1 medium onion, peeled and cut in two
- 1 celery stalk, roughly chopped.
Preparation Instructions
- In pot large enough to hold brisket, combine 1 gallon of water with kosher salt, sugar, sodium nitrite (if using), garlic and 2 tablespoons pickling spice (below). Bring to a simmer, stirring until salt and sugar are dissolved. Remove from heat and let cool to room temperature, then refrigerate until chilled.
- Place brisket in brine, weighted with a plate to keep it submerged; cover. Refrigerate for 5 days.
- Remove brisket from brine and rinse thoroughly. Place in a pot just large enough to hold it. Cover with water and add remaining pickling spice, carrot, onion and celery. Bring to a boil over high heat, reduce heat to low and cover. Simmer gently until brisket is fork-tender, about 3 hours, adding water if needed to cover brisket. (I cooked mine on low overnight in a crock pot; I’ll do it next time on the stovetop and see what different I can discern. There will be a next time!)
- Keep warm until ready to serve. Meat can be refrigerated for several days in cooking liquid. Reheat in the liquid or serve chilled. Slice thinly (here’s how) and serve on a sandwich or with additional vegetables simmered until tender in the cooking liquid.
*A note about the salt from Michael: Salt level not hugely critical here because it’s basically boiled and excess salt moves into cooking liquid. You can weigh out 12 ounces here if you feel better using a scale (approximately a 10% brine). Or you can simply make a 5% brine of however much water you need to cover (6.4 ounces per gallon). When you cook it, season the cooking liquid to the level you want your meat seasoned. Another option is wrapping the brisket in foil and cooking it in a 225 degree oven till tender, but only do this if you’ve used the 5% brine.
Yield: 8 to 10 servings.
Pickling Spice
- 12 tablespoons black peppercorns
- 2 tablespoons black peppercorns
- 2 tablespoons mustard seeds
- 2 tablespoons coriander seeds
- 2 tablespoons hot red pepper flakes
- 2 tablespoons allspice berries
- 1 tablespoon ground mace
- 2 small cinnamon sticks, crushed or broken into pieces
- 2 to 4 bay leaves, crumbled
- 2 tablespoons whole cloves
- 1 tablespoon ground ginger.
- Combine peppercorns, mustard seeds and coriander seeds in a small dry pan. Place over medium heat and stir until fragrant, being careful not to burn them; keep lid handy in case seeds pop.
- Crack peppercorns and seeds in mortar and pestle or with the side of a knife on cutting board.
- Combine with other spices, mix. Store in tightly sealed plastic or glass container.
That looks like a lot but really, it’s not. You mix and grind the spices, add them to water with the brisket, keep it chilled for 5 days and then on the 5th day you cook the meat with a couple of vegetables and more spices. I actually think I spent almost as much time figuring out how to cut the meat…and did find it should be sliced on an angle to the grain so you don’t end up with strings of the finished product.
Ingredients for Sandwich
Layer each sandwich with:
- Light rye bread, one slice slathered inside with Russian dressing (recipe below).
NOTE: I wanted to make this sandwich and stay true to an authentic recipe but have to tell you, we also tried it with the Steak Remoulade Salad Dressing from Oxford Falls. I met Jim, the owner, on Twitter and got to test this sauce BEFORE production; it is, in a word, amazing! Jim only sells wholesale but you can purchase it online from another friend of ours, Renee at Freakin Flamingo. I just order it by the case. It’s that good. - 1 thin slice of good swiss cheese
- Corned beef
- Sauerkraut
- A second thin slice of swiss cheese
- 2nd piece of rye bread on top
Preparation
- Spread some butter on the outside of both sides of sandwich.
- Gently grill til the cheese starts to melt. Serve with coleslaw (I made a modified version of this recipe at All Recipes; substituting some of the mayonnaise with yogurt).
Russian Dressing
I did do a bit of research on Russian dressing and found that it originally was made with yogurt, not mayonnaise and contained caviar which is most likely where it got the Russian moniker. Some people add pickles or chopped eggs but that really takes it more to the world of Thousand Island so I tried to stay within some confines of the original but without the caviar.
Ingredients
- 1 – 1/2 cup yogurt – I used non fat Greek yogurt
- 1/2 cup ketchup
- 2 Tbsp grated onion
- 1/2 tsp ground dry mustard
- 4 drops hot sauce
- 1/2 tsp horseradish
- 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce
- 1 Tbsp heavy cream
Directions
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the yogurt, ketchup, onion, mustard, hot sauce, horseradish, Worcestershire, and cream. Chill for at least 2 hours to have the ingredients meld.
- Can also be used for salads, in egg salad, veggies or meat.










{ 45 comments… read them below or add one }
Waving “Hi” from Twitter!!! Just happened to “Stumble” onto your site!! This sandwich looks INCREDIBLE!!! I want one!!!! oh…wow…..so good!!!
– View Denise @ Creative Kitchen most recent post: Chicken Parmesan Pasta…easy stovetop method! –
I love a good Reuben sandwich. Can yours look any more mouthwatering? I don’t think so. Hungry for lunch now. :-)
Hi Barb,
I saw your cake on Lora’s page and had to come see what else you had. I had no idea. My husband would die if I made him this corned beef. I haven’t seen charcutepalooza, can’t wait.
-Gina-
Welcome…and thanks for visiting; I was happy I could help Lora a bit; she is the most amazing baker.
Gorgeous! Please share, my arteries are clogging with anticipated delight :)
It looks more artery clogging than it is. The beef is lean; the cheese is low fat and I used yogurt in lieu of mayo in the dressing. Real butter on the bread though. There are limits! Altogether…still decadent.
This is just absolutely divine. That corned beef looks incredible, and I am going to have to get this book for my meat and smoking obsessed husband.
Seriously Shaina you should…and then have him do a couple of the challenges. It’s fun to have a community to do it along with. Even if I’m behind the curve in my scheduling, I love the support and sharing as we delve into this unknown together.
The evil plan is working. xox
I have always wondered how hard it would be to make my own corned beef, you make it sound like I could even do it! And that sandwich looks incredible, I would absolutely devour it!
It is soooo easy. The hardest part was getting the pink salt. A friend had to send me some but I’ve now found it locally at savoryspiceshop.com where you can order it online and I heard Walmart has it in the canning section too.
I seriously want to jump through the screen and bite into that sandwich right now. I wish I had some of my charcutepalooza corned beef left so I could assemble a beauty like that. Seriously… the toasted bread, so simple… but it looks so tempting with everything oozing out of it!
I wish everyone who wished they had one could come over and I’ll serve them up!
Oh my goodness. I have an urge to wrap my hands and mouth around that glorious sandwich – preferably in private so I don’t have to share with anybody.
You are making ME hungry…and I can have one for dinner. Come on over! :)
it’s too bad you can’t seek the ultimate prize because this corned beef reuben is one of my favorite palooza posts thus far.
Coming from you that is high praise indeed; thank you Linda!
I want to yell an expletive at that sandwich. I want to sit in awe and yell “How F***!!” over and over and over again because that is food glory in its simplicity. That sandwich looks like it belongs at Katz’s.
This might be the most compelling reason to show my husband to get into this home curing business. I don’t even LIKE brisket that much and I am drooling.
Hehe…no yelling at the sandwich; it’s been too good!
It does look like a sandwich that could elicit a lot of heavenly moans and groans.
That is one delicious looking sandwich!
Wow! That looks delicious and I’m not a huge fan of Corned Beef, but I may have to reconsider if I make my own. I have a feeling that I will be taking up where my grandparents left off after seeing this :) Thanks for showing us how easy curing your own meat can be.
I never eat it for anything but a Reuben so thinking the cheese and sauce doesn’t hurt and for me, the kraut which I can eat all by itself too. Really.
Oh yeah lovin’ that sauce and kraut :)
I made that same noise just looking at the photo. Man that’s a good looking and wonderful sounding sandwich!
I am so glad I tried this Lea Ann and really…so easy. Brining and slow cooking? Piece of cake. Finding the pink salt the hardest part and guess who has it. Savory Spice Shop. Whoo hoo!
So easy too Lea Ann; I will never buy corned beef ready made again; this is just too sublime. Jason’s Deli is going to miss me!
Have to admit, was never much of a corned beef fan (but I always liked reubens, go figure) but now I am thinking I really need to give corned beef another go – but only if I make it this way!!
I am sure that it would beat any reuben I’ve had – made with some good rye bread from Nate n’ Al’s and I definitely think I would agree with you – nirvana!!!
Pretty much the same here Nancy; don’t think I’ve ever had corned beef hash or any other dish I can think of. maybe it’s the kraut and dressing and cheese we REALLY love?!!
Looks wonderful. I think this is next on my Charcuterie journey. I need one of those sandwiches in my life.
The sandwich fixings were more difficult than making the corned beef; you must do it!
I’m not going to lie. This makes me drool a little… reminds me of the sandwiches I ate growing up.
I was sick during St. Patricks….I need a fix of Rubeuns and Beer. Leave the back porch door open, I’m on my way. Giggles
I’m ready. :)
I have been torturing myself over corned beef for weeks now, but it’s enough! Youn have convinced me to jump right in, as it is completely doable in my tiny California apartment with no garage, no extra fridge, and no storage:)
I am so hungry for your Reuben! Thanks for tempting me and prompting me. I’ll yell for help on Twitter if something goes awry!
No problem…happy to see you jump onboard. Since you can’t find pink salt, go to contact form and send me an email with your address. I’ll send you enough for the recipe.
That’s a fine looking Reuben. I’m sure the home made corned beef made it spectacular.
Thank you very much; and that it certainly did!
My pleasure to help, even in a small part, to bring another in to the folds of home-curing. Can’t wait until you have made bacon, and then the giant step to pancetta. You will be in taste heaven. Yell if you need anything.
And now a friend needs some; and I found local resource today. So LOVE that your pink salt became my pink salt and will now become her pink salt…the power of Twitter at it’s best, huh?
I am fascinated by this quest. I have made corned beef but admittedly it all came in the package with a little spice pouch. Much more like the idea of doing it from scratch. I really want to know more about the bacon. ‘Let’s talk’! Thanks for sharing all this.
Let’s do talk…we could be makin bacon together!
Speaking of torture this morning. That golden crispiness of the bread and what’s hidden beneath it got me and I never eat this early! We love corned beef and it’s interesting you say to follow the recipe to the letter, cause’ I agree you can mess it! There is an art in producinga perfect corned bread and seems like you achieved it. I am hungry!
Love that you are doing this. It’s so much better when we cure our own meats. The sense of accomplishment makes it even more delicious.
I knew you would be the proud mama you’re such a pro. Fun and rewarding for sure.