Seitan Brisket
A wonderful vegetarian equivalent to the traditional meal dish.
Like many Ashkenazic Jews, I grew up believing that my mother made the best brisket in the world. Fragrant, savory, and unbelievably tender, it was the stuff of holidays, of memories--of sneaking back to the fridge at midnight, long after the guests had gone home. When I decided to become a vegetarian at age 17, I did so with the acute and sorrowful understanding that I was saying goodbye to one of my favorite dishes.
Brisket was such a sacred food, that I never even considered trying to recreate it for my meat-free lifestyle ... until a friend mentioned that he was trying to "perfect his vegetarian brisket." Intrigued, I began fiddling with my own version, combining the recipe I found in The Passionate Vegetarian with the tastes I recall from childhood. While the resulting dish is by no means an exact replica of my mother's, it definitely holds it own on the Rosh Hashanah table or at a Purim feast.
Of course, vegetarian brisket is a rather blatant misnomer, because the word brisket specifically refers to a cut of meat (the "flat, boneless, flavorful cut taken from the breast of a steer," according to Matthew Goodman's Jewish Food: The World at Table). However, over time, the concept of brisket--at least "Jewish brisket"--has become almost interchangeable with its preparation: the long, slow braise necessary to soften this tough kosher cut into a steamy pile of juice and meat. In that sense, in the recipe below, "brisket" refers not to a particular ingredient, but rather to a method of cooking, and to the noble search for gastro-Jewish nirvana. Seitan, a meat substitute made from wheat, is inherently soft and tender, so it does not need to stew for quite as long as traditional brisket. But since your taste buds will quickly become intoxicated by the smell of onions, caraway, tamari, and garlic wafting from the oven, the quicker cooking time is a blessing. <<< Less |
Directions
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