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It is that time of year again—the time when we start making my famous Corned Beef. I make this every single year for Mark and me. You can’t go wrong making this recipe because it brings back so many memories from years of tradition. You will love the simplicity of this recipe and how you can easily make it for your entire family. Let’s learn all about how to make Corned Beef.

When my daughters were young, it was important to me to have traditions on holidays. We made this dish, green French Toast, Green Milk, Green pancakes, Green bread, and Green Finger Jello. I have a few recipes below for my other St. Patrick’s Day traditions.
I quote Wikipedia: “Corned beef is not an Irish national dish, and the connection with Saint Patrick’s Day specifically originates as part of Irish-American culture and is often part of their celebrations in North America. The corned beef was used as a substitute for bacon by Irish immigrants in the late 19th century.”
In case you missed this post, Pulled Pork In A Slow Cooker, or this post, Soda Bread: Step By Step How To Make It
Only a few kitchen items are needed. We must have the ingredients to make the best dish possible. I love creating recipes that only call for a few tools!
Remove the outer plastic packaging from the meat, and place the meat in the slow cooker with the goodies from the seasoning and spice packet enclosed, and the juice from the bag. Completely cover the meat with water. The “foamy” white stuff you see is the salt from the meat solution of the package, thus, corned beef. Secure the lid on your slow cooker. I set my slow cooker for TEN hours on LOW the night before.

The following day, grab a cutting board and chop the potatoes, carrots (use the carrots shown below), and onions into wedges.

Add the chopped vegetables to the slow cooker.

Chop or slice the cabbage as shown below. I only used about 3/4 of the large cabbage I purchased.

Cover the vegetables with the cabbage, then set the slow cooker to HIGH for another 6 hours. You will add more water if needed.

After cooking the corned beef in the slow cooker or Instant Pot, transfer it to a greased baking pan.

Here is a nifty trick for making corned beef look fabulous: Heat your oven to 350°F (176°C) and place the meat on a shallow, greased pan, fat side up. Lather the fat with mustard and sprinkle with 1/2 cup brown sugar.

Bake for 20-30 minutes, until the brown sugar is crispy. This is the most tender recipe you will ever make. When finished cooking, the meat will be ‘fork tender’. Delicious!

Serve immediately with vegetables.


In simple terms, Corned Beef is just a salt-cured brisket of beef. The term “corned beef” comes from the way the meat is cured. Corns of salt are used to cure the meat. This is what makes it so unique and so delicious.
I have tried a variety of potatoes over the years. It depends on the texture and flavor you want for your corned beef. Here is a list of the other potatoes you can use and the outcome you could expect.
After you make this traditional meal, you may wonder how to store it. You can store the corned beef in the fridge for at least 3-4 days. As the days go by, the texture of the corned beef may change, but it will still be good to eat.
Did you know you can also freeze cooked beef? Once the meat is in a freezer-safe container, you can place it in the freezer for 2-3 months. Unthaw it in the refrigerator and warm up as you usually would.
Let’s say you opened a can of corned beef, but you are not ready to use it all. There is a way to store opened corned beef. If it is in an airtight container, you can store it (covered) in the refrigerator for 3-4 days. Canned foods have magical powers. I grew up on sandwiches made out of them.
If you were biting into Corned Beef for the first time, you would taste something sweet and sour. It has a very meaty, salty flavor. Corned beef undergoes a brining process that helps give it its distinctive flavor. Corned refers to the size of the salt used to create the beef.
Corned beef can be served in a variety of delicious ways!
To pickle beef into corned beef, you must brine the meat in a mixture of water, pickling salt (curing salt/pink salt/kosher salt), sugar, and spices. Depending on the size of the beef, you will need to brine it for anywhere from 2 days to a week. I usually brine my beef for about 5 days.
The brine should include some combination of pickling spices such as peppercorns, coriander seeds, ginger, bay leaves, mustard seeds, allspice berries or juniper berries, cloves, and mace. I like to mix the spices in a small bowl until they are well combined.
Here is a general rule when making pickled corned beef.
Although corned beef is known to be pink, that doesn’t necessarily mean the meat hasn’t been cooked thoroughly. I recommend using a food thermometer to check the internal temperature. When cooked, the meat should reach an internal temperature of 160°F (71°C) in the thickest part.
Corned beef gets its pink color from the nitrites used in the curing process. Nitrites help to preserve the meat and give it its distinct flavor and color.

I have to share this picture of my sweet granddaughter making green bread.


Milk, milk with green food coloring
Mashed potatoes with green food coloring
Green orange juice, add green food coloring
Green gelatin cut into Shamrocks
Pancakes, 1/2-dollar size (gold coins)
Green pancakes, pancakes with green food coloring
Green waffles with green food coloring
Cold cereal with green milk
Green breadsticks (bread dough with green food coloring)
Now is your chance if you have never learned how to make corned beef. It is never too late to create new memories for your family. I have been making this Corned Beef recipe for years, and it is, without a doubt, a family tradition. Make this St. Patrick’s Day memorable by making this Corned Beef. It is so important to keep traditions like this alive. May God bless this world, Linda.
The post How To Make Corned Beef In A Slow Cooker appeared first on Food Storage Moms.
Gardening, no matter how you tackle it, is always hard work. But every seasoned gardener knows that it can get a lot harder when you’ve got to combat the seemingly countless pests and diseases that want to rob you of your harvest. Slugs, bugs, bacteria, viruses, fungi, nematodes, mammals, and more: all are waiting to ... Read more
50 Garden Remedies for Pests and Diseases That Work can be read in full at New Life On A Homestead- Be sure to check it out!
I feel it’s appropriate to help those without food storage to inform them about my 3-month food challenge. Building a food storage inventory doesn’t have to be complicated, expensive, or scary. Whether you’re motivated by emergencies, rising grocery prices, or just wanting more financial cushion, a 3-month food supply is one of the most practical things you can do for your family. Everything you need to know, what to buy, how to store it, and how to get started, even on a tight budget, is included in this post.
This post breaks it all down simply. By the time you finish reading, you’ll know exactly what to buy, how to store it, and how to build your supply week by week without breaking the bank.

Did I mention that Mark and I are living off of our #10 cans of freeze-dried food? We decided that at our age, we may as well start eating it now. Our children won’t want all that we have stored. That’s okay, I get it. We taught them to garden, preserve food, cook from scratch, and, my favorite, to make bread. They all know how to cook from scratch; that’s a blessing.
Cooking with freeze-dried food takes more water than I had anticipated. Just giving you a heads up. Freeze-dried food takes a bit to get used to. I hope you practice now with a can or two. All of my #10 cans and pantry cans are from the company that closed, called Thrive Life. Great products, great company. It was sad to see them close.
The meat is not what you would expect, my friends. It’s fine for casseroles and soups. It’s okay for tacos, but not my favorite. The chicken is chewier than I had expected. It’s fine, it’s food. I opted against any “prepared meals” because I knew I could cook from scratch. They have a lot of sodium in them, but hey, it’s quality food storage with a long shelf life.
My freeze-dried food is just what it says on the can: ground beef, chicken, onions, apples, etc. No additives. Just oxygen absorbers. I have everything I need to cook from scratch. Would I love a half of beef, of course I would. It’s not in the budget. We have everything we need to survive and stay healthy.
Three months is the sweet spot recommended by emergency management agencies, financial experts, and preparedness communities for one simple reason: it’s enough to cover almost any realistic disruption.
Key Insight: A 3-month food storage plan for one person costs roughly $300–$500 to build — about $25–$40 per week over 12 weeks. For a family of four, budget $800–$1,500 total.
The golden rule of food storage: store what you eat, and eat what you store. Don’t buy a bunch of unfamiliar foods your family won’t touch in a stressful situation. Start with your everyday meals and build from there.
Here’s a breakdown of the core food categories to focus on, in order of priority:
White rice, pasta, oats, and flour form the backbone of your supply. They’re cheap, calorie-dense, and store for years. Buy these first and buy a lot of them.
Canned tuna, canned chicken, salmon, beans, and lentils give you the protein your body needs. Peanut butter is also a pantry hero, calorie-dense, shelf-stable, and universally loved.
Canned tomatoes, corn, green beans, and mixed vegetables round out your nutrition needs and make meals feel like actual meals rather than survival rations.
Olive oil, coconut oil, and ghee add calories and enhance the taste of food. These have shorter shelf lives than other categories, so buy smaller amounts more frequently.
Salt, sugar, spices, coffee, tea, and a few comfort items are underrated. Morale matters during hard times. Don’t build a storage inventory that’s technically nutritious but miserable to eat from.
Here’s a simple reference table for a 3-month supply per person. Multiply by your household size.
PRINTABLE: 3 Month Food Supply Check List
| Food Category | Amount (per person) | Shelf Life |
|---|---|---|
| White rice | 25–35 lbs | 25+ years |
| Pasta | 15–20 lbs | 5–8 years |
| Oats | 10–15 lbs | 5–30 years |
| Dried beans & lentils | 20–25 lbs | 8–30 years |
| Canned protein (tuna, chicken) | 25–35 cans | 3–5 years |
| Canned vegetables | 40–60 cans | 3–5 years |
| Peanut butter | 6–10 jars | 1–2 years |
| Cooking oil | 4–6 liters | 1–2 years |
| Sugar & salt | 10–15 lbs each | Indefinite |
Buying the right food is only half the equation. Proper storage can double or even triple the shelf life of your food. The four enemies of food storage are heat, light, moisture, and oxygen.
Best Storage Container: 5-gallon food-grade buckets with gamma-seal lids are the gold standard. They’re airtight, stackable, rodent-proof, and one bucket holds about 33 lbs of rice. You can find them at hardware stores or online for $8–$15 each. I have a lid color coding system, so I know how much of each food commodity I have in storage. I also have each container labeled so there’s no question what’s inside if I’m not available when food is being prepared using the stored item(s).
The hardest part of food storage is simply starting. Here’s a simple 4-step plan to get your first week going:
Audit What You Already Have: Walk through your pantry and write down what’s already there. You likely already have a good head start. Note expiration dates and identify gaps in commodities and dates.
Set a Weekly Budget: Even $20–$30 extra per week adds up quickly. Decide on an amount you can consistently commit to over the next 12 weeks.
This week, buy (1) 25-lb bag of white rice and 10 lbs of pasta. That’s your caloric foundation, and it’ll cost you around $20–$30. Store it in an airtight container.
A case of canned tuna (24 cans) and a 10 lb bag of dried lentils. You now have the foundation of real, nutritious meals that could last weeks.
Keep going week by week, filling in vegetables, flavor builders, and comfort foods. Within 12 weeks, you’ll have a complete, solid supply.
Do I need special “survival” food or freeze-dried meals?
No. Regular canned goods and bulk dry staples work perfectly well, cost a fraction of the price, and use foods your family already knows how to cook. Only consider freeze-dried food once your basic pantry is fully stocked.
Where do I store food in a small apartment? Under beds, in closets, behind furniture, and in storage ottomans. You’d be surprised how much a small apartment can hold with creative use of vertical space. A single tall bookshelf dedicated to food storage can hold a substantial supply for one or two people.
How do I cook if the power goes out? A two-burner propane camp stove ($30–$60) is the most practical solution for most households. Store a few extra propane canisters alongside your food supply. You’ll need a plan to use the stove outside for safety’s sake.
What about water? Water comes before food. The recommended minimum is one gallon per person per day; that’s 90 gallons per person for a full 3-month supply. Start with stackable water storage containers or large food-grade water barrels. I recommend 4 gallons of water per day per person. Please remember your pets need water.
Will this actually save me money on groceries? Yes, often significantly. Buying rice by the 25-lb bag instead of the 2-lb box typically cuts the price per pound by 60–70%. Having a full pantry also means you shop sales strategically and never make expensive last-minute grocery runs.
15 Foods I Would Stock For Sure
Building a 3-month food storage inventory isn’t about living in fear; it’s about living with confidence. When your pantry is stocked, a job loss doesn’t become a food crisis. A storm doesn’t send you scrambling. An unexpected expense doesn’t mean skipping meals.
Start small. Buy a bag of rice and a case of canned beans this week. Add a little more next week. Before you know it, you’ll have something that genuinely protects your family and saves you money in the process. The best time to build your food storage was last year. The second-best time is today. May God bless this world, Linda
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When the grid goes down and grocery store shelves are bare, peanut butter might just be one of the most valuable foods in your stockpile. It’s calorie-dense, protein-rich, and incredibly shelf-stable — exactly what a serious prepper needs. But here’s what most people don’t realize: store-bought peanut butter is just the beginning. Knowing how to […]
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