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1 boneless beef brisket (about 3 pounds); 1 small head cabbage (about 1 pound), cut into 8 wedges; 1 large sweet potato (about 3/4 pound), peeled and cut into 1-inch pieces; 1 large onion, cut ...
5-6 pound brisket. 1 ½ tablespoons sweet smoked paprika. ... Keeping foil open, cook brisket in the oven for an addition few minutes. Take out of oven and cool. Slice thinly and enjoy!
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Before cooking, the iron atom is in a +2 oxidation state and bound to a dioxygen molecule (O 2), giving raw meat its red color. As meat cooks, the iron atom loses an electron, moving to a +3 oxidation state and coordinating with a water molecule (H 2 O), which causes the meat to turn brown.
Brisket is tough, but cheap, and if cooked for many hours at a low temperature it becomes tender. [4] Brisket became popular among Ashkenazi Jews due to its low cost; farmers would sell the expensive cuts and keep the cheaper ones. [5] Ashkenazi Jewish refugees brought shtetl cooking with them, and introduced brisket to the general American ...
There are several plans for roasting meat: low-temperature cooking, high-temperature cooking, and a combination of both. Each method can be suitable, depending on the food and the tastes of the people. A low-temperature oven, 95 to 160 °C (200 to 320 °F), is best when cooking with large cuts of meat, turkey and whole chickens. [2]
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Medium and medium fat: the most popular cuts from the middle of the brisket. Occasionally, a sliced mix of lean and fat meats. Old-fashioned: a cut between medium and fatty and often cut a bit thicker. Fat: from the fat end of the brisket; Speck: consists solely of the spiced subcutaneous fat from the whole brisket without meat.