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Life After Brown
What's the meaning of St Patrick's Day?
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<blockquote data-quote="cosmo1" data-source="post: 3987735" data-attributes="member: 13442"><p>And, you don't even have to be Irish to enjoy it.</p><p></p><p><a href="https://amazingribs.com/tested-recipes/beef-and-bison-recipes/traditional-corned-beef-and-cabbage-recipe" target="_blank">traditional-corned-beef-and-cabbage-recipe</a></p><p></p><p><span style="font-size: 22px"><strong>Traditional Corned Beef and Cabbage Recipe</strong></span></p><p>By <a href="https://amazingribs.com/author/meathead-goldwyn" target="_blank">Meathead Goldwyn</a></p><p></p><p>Corned Beef And Cabbage is the tradition on St. Patrick's Day, an event that, to me, is more about our common immigrant stories that about being Irish. Irish Americans share their remarkable tale with Jews, Italians, Germans, Cubans, and Mexicans. So many of us can trace our heritage to fearful, ragged, tired, and poor arriving on our shores with not much more than the clothes on their back, life in hovels, hard labor, discrimination, acclimation, acculturation, and success. That's why we are all Irish in some way.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Surprisingly, Corned Beef And Cabbage is not a tradition in Ireland. It is an Irish-American-Jewish tradition. Corned pork and cabbage is more common in the Emerald Isles where beef was scarce and expensive. But Irish immigrants in the US found beef more plentiful in their lower Manhattan ghettos where the butchers were mostly kosher Jews and pork was verboten.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="cosmo1, post: 3987735, member: 13442"] And, you don't even have to be Irish to enjoy it. [URL='https://amazingribs.com/tested-recipes/beef-and-bison-recipes/traditional-corned-beef-and-cabbage-recipe']traditional-corned-beef-and-cabbage-recipe[/URL] [SIZE=6][B]Traditional Corned Beef and Cabbage Recipe[/B][/SIZE] By [URL='https://amazingribs.com/author/meathead-goldwyn']Meathead Goldwyn[/URL] Corned Beef And Cabbage is the tradition on St. Patrick's Day, an event that, to me, is more about our common immigrant stories that about being Irish. Irish Americans share their remarkable tale with Jews, Italians, Germans, Cubans, and Mexicans. So many of us can trace our heritage to fearful, ragged, tired, and poor arriving on our shores with not much more than the clothes on their back, life in hovels, hard labor, discrimination, acclimation, acculturation, and success. That's why we are all Irish in some way. Surprisingly, Corned Beef And Cabbage is not a tradition in Ireland. It is an Irish-American-Jewish tradition. Corned pork and cabbage is more common in the Emerald Isles where beef was scarce and expensive. But Irish immigrants in the US found beef more plentiful in their lower Manhattan ghettos where the butchers were mostly kosher Jews and pork was verboten. [/QUOTE]
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What's the meaning of St Patrick's Day?
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