Steamed Brisket in Guinness®

  4.1 – 7 reviews  • Irish

Simple, nutritious, and delicious describe these honey-roasted carrots and parsnips! My pregnant wife requested carrots, parsnips, and honey, so I combined those ingredients and baked them, yielding the results you see above.

Prep Time: 15 mins
Cook Time: 8 hrs
Additional Time: 1 hr
Total Time: 9 hrs 15 mins
Servings: 8
Yield: 8 servings

Ingredients

  1. 1 tablespoon salt
  2. 1 tablespoon ground black pepper
  3. 2 teaspoons paprika
  4. 1 teaspoon dried basil
  5. 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  6. 1 teaspoon garlic powder
  7. 1 teaspoon onion powder
  8. 4 pounds beef brisket
  9. 2 large onions, sliced into rings
  10. 2 bay leaves
  11. 3 ½ cups Irish stout beer (such as Guinness®)

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 250 degrees F (120 degrees C).
  2. Mix salt, black pepper, paprika, basil, oregano, garlic powder, and onion powder in a bowl; rub spice mixture over brisket.
  3. Arrange onion rings in the bottom of a roasting pan; lay brisket, fat-side up, atop onions. Scatter bay leaves around brisket. Pour beer over brisket. Cover roasting pan with an oven-proof lid or aluminum foil.
  4. Cook in the preheated oven for 8 hours. An instant-read thermometer should read an internal temperature of 145 degrees F (65 degrees C). Remove from oven and let rest for 1 hour before slicing.
  5. Refrigerate cooked brisket for 8 hours and skim fat that has risen to the top if desired. At this point, you can slice brisket and reheat.

Nutrition Facts

Calories 449 kcal
Carbohydrate 9 g
Cholesterol 93 mg
Dietary Fiber 1 g
Protein 25 g
Saturated Fat 12 g
Sodium 937 mg
Sugars 2 g
Fat 32 g
Unsaturated Fat 0 g

Reviews

Alice Dominguez
This was fabulous! We did make slight modifications. For instance, we turned down the heat about halfway through cooking and let it cook slow for 10 hours total. Also, we used 2 bottles of stout and the drippings made a terrific gravy.
Leslie Munoz
Outstanding! I followed the directions and it was quite the hit for Christmas Eve dinner. Thanks!
Karen Evans
Made exactly as written and this turned out very good. The only disappointment I had was in the texture. Don’t get me wrong it was super tender but I like it with a little more texture where you can slice it. This turns out more like a stringy roast beef. I did let it rest for an hour after it cooked so I’m hoping the leftovers firmed up in the fridge overnight. Regardless, this was super tasty and got a nice bark on it.
Daniel Brown
Results were inedible. My oven is partially to blame (it was recently repaired and now it runs much hotter than it used to, so the roast was overcooked), but even if the roast weren’t overdone the spice mixture and flavour imparted by the Guinness were awful. I tried to make some use of the leftovers by cutting it up and masking it with a bunch of other good flavours (I’m usually good at that) but this was unsalvageable.
Christopher Bond
This recipe turned out really well. I followed everything, except I used fresh garlic and onions instead of the powders for the rub. My only complaint is that the final drippings were quite bitter because of the Guinness and did not make a good gravy. I didn’t like wasting all that beautiful flavour. Next time I will reduce the Guinness and maybe add more water or beef broth.
Daniel Bautista
Wow! I’m not opposed to tinkering with a recipe but this sounded so good that I didn’t change a thing. I applied the rub to the brisket and let it sit covered in the fridge overnight. We had guests over for dinner and everyone raved about it. Thanks for a great recipe Josie.
Carol Hernandez
Josie, this was a very good rub and process to prepare the brisket. I knew going into this I did not want to boil the brisket in a pot of water. The brisket was so tender and juicy, there was barely a chance to cut it into slices. Not complaining, and neither was anyone else in my family. There are hardly any leftovers from the three of us who eat meat in the house. My brisket was only 3lbs. I baked it in a roasting pan with foil tightly on top of roasting pan and put the roasting pan lid on top of that for 6 hours at 275 F. I know you recomended 250 F and maybe thats why it was just fall apart delicious. The ony things I did differently were minimal. I know everyone has their likes and ideas of what they want to do, or, have no idea, and thats what brings them to this site. So, this is what I did different. I used only 3 cups of Guinness Extra Stout, and made a 1 cup vegetable broth, of which I only used 1/2 cup, or so. To that broth I added, 1/2 tsp. horseradish (prepared), 3 cloves minced garlic, 1 tsp. worcestershire. In the bottom of roaster I put 3 pcs. of celery, to keep brisket off bottom, onions, then brisket on top. Added stout, vegetable broth (slowly) over top and put carrots, around it. In the city of “Constant Chaos”, great food will keep them quiet, for a bit…

 

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