When Grover Cleveland took the Presidential Oath of Office in 1885, he  was appalled to find that his rotund predecessor, the all but forgotten  Chester A. Arthur, had transformed White House dining into an endless  gastronomic banquet.  The new meat-and-potatoes President Cleveland was  driven to despair at the sight of all those slippery oysters on his  mac-n-cheese and thought he’d never again enjoy a good meal.  Then one  night, appalled at the French cuisine that was being served, yet again,  the President smelled an intoxicating aroma coming from the servant’s  quarters.  Finding his servants dining on corned beef and cabbage, the  President requested they swap their food for his.  And once he’d tasted  their lowly boiled corned beef and cabbage, the world leader declared  that he’d finally found food fit for the Gods. 
This week all across America, as we celebrate St. Patrick’s Day,  families will sit down to this same meal of unceremoniously boiled meat  and vegetables that had brought such joy to the nineteenth century  President.  But curiously, the boiled dinner of corned beef (or less  commonly, ham) and cabbage and root vegetables which is famed as a  traditional Irish meal, is anything but a traditional Irish meal.  But  that’s one of the curious things about tradition – it changes  continually, modifying to adapt to new conditions, new sentiments, and  new ideas.  In fact, there aren’t many “traditional” foods anywhere that  didn’t originate sometime in the historical records, vary across  regions and among families, and change many times.  And that’s what  makes our traditions so much fun – they are ours for the making.
And that is precisely how “boiled dinner” or corned beef and cabbage  came to be the “traditional” St. Patrick’s Day meal.  It was a meal  modified to invoke memories of Irish cuisine, but suited to the New  England and Newfoundland regions where Irish had settled following the  potato famine during the nineteenth century.
Yet even potatoes, as “traditionally” Irish as the shamrock, were an agricultural innovation of the 17th  century.  When the British appropriated Irish lands to graze beef for  export, the Irish were forced to grow their food on more marginal  lands.  In order to maximize caloric production on minimal land  holdings, they began growing potatoes, which soon replaced porridge as  the dietary staple of Irish commoners and to this day remains a central  part of the Irish diet.
The beef that grazed on Irish lands remained too expensive for most  Irish households to afford.  But curing meats with salt had proven to be  such an effective method of preserving meat, that it was an excellent  source of protein for transport to supply the British Navy (which is why  corned beef used to be stamped “Cured Naval Beef”) or to the British  colonies to feed slave labor in the Caribbean.
The common story is that the term “corned” beef came about because  the coarse salt used in curing was the size of a kernel of corn.  But  the word “corn” itself derived from the Old English word “corn”  referring to any grain with the seed still in it.  “Corning” was a  curing process involving salt the size of grains, a term applied to meat  as early as the mid 16th century, whereas the modern English use of the word corn to apply to corn on the cob did not become common usage until the 17th century, when it was used in the American colonies to apply to “Indian” corn.
How then, did corned beef and cabbage come to be a “traditional”  Irish meal if it was not consumed by the Irish?  Because pigs were  common in Ireland, smoked and salted pork in the form of bacon or ham  was a common source of meat protein, leading to the popularity of the  ordinary peasant meal of boiled bacon back served with potatoes (often  mashed) in white sauce.
When the 19th century Irish potato famine led to a mass  emigration from Ireland to North America, Irish immigrants in New  England and New Foundland longed for their familiar foods.  But bacon  back (very different from the slabs or slices of bacon in stores today)  was not as common, and salt-cured “corned” beef was.  Immigrant women  found that boiling the locally-available “corned” beef with local  vegetables, produced a meal very similar to the boiled bacon back and  mashed potatoes of their homeland, even if the rich white sauce had  become too expensive for most immigrant households in America and had to  be abandoned.  In other words, the relocated Irish relied on available  foods, new or differing curing and cooking technologies, and their  economic means, to transform a cultural memory into a new “traditional”  feast consistent with the foods they’d had in Ireland, but not the  same.  And that’s how traditions are born.
Yet the history of boiling meat and potatoes extends far past the  immigration of the Irish to North America.  Meals of boiled meat (or  fish) and carbohydrates are common throughout the world, where cooking  fuel – and cooking utensils – are scarce and both must be used  efficiently.  With hundreds of millions of homes – mostly in the  developing world – depending on wood fuel as their primary source of  energy, boiled dinners may well be the most common meals humans cook.
By placing a kettle of meat (or beans) on the fire to cook through  the day, a tough cut of meat (when available) or dried bean becomes  tender and produces rich stock that is filling and nutritious.  These  peasant meals become more complex as they make their way to urban  settings, where seasoning and other ingredients are added to create new  classic dishes.  Whether the French pot au feu, the Italian bollito misto or Vietnamese pho, “boiled dinner” is a “traditional” feast across the globe.
And the key to a good boiled dinner?  Just like remembering that the  last thing a microwave oven can do is bake, always remember that a good  boiled dinner must never boil – it simmers (though I have tried baking  it to excellent and horrid results – excellent was produced from rinsing  the corned beef very well and baking it in loads of water, horrid was  the result of using very little  water and roasting the beef to tender –  but sickeningly salty—perfection).
Finally, there is no reason you can’t innovate with your own boiled  dinner recipe.   While contemporary corned beef and cabbage includes an  assortment of root vegetables (potatoes, rutabagas, carrots, turnips,  parsnips – whatever is on hand), there is no reason you can’t omit the  turnips if you don’t like them, or add onions if you do (now very common  to most boiled dinner recipes, but among some purists adding an onion  to boiled dinner is as shocking as boiling a baseball).
My own innovation?  Years ago I realized that while boiled dinner is  one of my all time favorite dinners, and probably the dinner I’d order  if I ever found myself on death row and had to choose a last supper, I  really don’t care much for a wedge of boiled cabbage no matter how it’s  presented.  So I have modified my “traditional” boiled dinner to include  not just a maverick onion or two, but sautéed shredded cabbage cooked  in a rich sauce of chicken stock, Dijon mustard, and bacon fat and  seasoned liberally with caraway seeds.  Serve with simmered corned beef,  root vegetables cooked in the rich meat stock, some fresh horseradish  mixed with sour cream, and mugs of Guinness stout and you’ve got a  “traditional” Irish meal fit for a leprechaun.

 
 
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