The Pioneer Woman fills her breakfast skillet with roasted potatoes, seasoned corned beef and sunny-side-up eggs!
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Take one sassy former city girl, her hunky rancher husband, a band of adorable kids, an extended family, cowboys, 3,000 wild mustangs, a herd of cattle and one placid basset hound and you have The Pioneer Woman. The Pioneer Woman is an open invitation into Ree Drummond’s life: The award-winning blogger and best-selling cookbook author comes to Food Network and shares her special brand of home cooking, from throw-together suppers to elegant celebrations. The series, set against the incredible story of life at home on the range, is the next best thing to actually sitting on a stool in Ree’s kitchen.
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Corned Beef Hash
RECIPE COURTESY OF REE DRUMMOND
Level: Easy
Total: 30 min
Active: 30 min
Yield: 4 servings
Ingredients
1 large russet potato, diced small
1 large sweet potato, diced small
6 tablespoons olive oil
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 large onion, diced small
2 cups corned beef, diced small
1 tablespoon steak seasoning
2 to 3 dashes Worcestershire sauce
4 large eggs
Hot sauce, for serving
Whole fresh parsley leaves, for garnish
Directions
Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F.
Toss the diced russet and sweet potatoes with 2 tablespoons of the olive oil and season with a pinch of salt and pepper. Place onto a baking sheet and roast until golden and crisp, 16 to 18 minutes.
Heat 2 tablespoons of the olive oil in a large skillet over a medium heat. Add the garlic and onions and cook until the onions are translucent and starting to turn golden, 4 to 5 minutes. Add the corned beef, potatoes and steak seasoning. Cook for another couple of minutes to heat the corned beef through. Add the Worcestershire sauce and stir.
Add the remaining 2 tablespoons oil to a nonstick skillet and fry the eggs to your liking, seasoning with salt and pepper if desired. Top the skillet of corned beef hash with the fried eggs, hot sauce to taste and parsley leaves. Serve.
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Ree Drummond’s Corned Beef Hash | The Pioneer Woman | Food Network
25 Comments
My favorite hash🤤
Yum! A favourite tip of mine is to break the thicker part of the whites… then they cook before your yolks become too firm. 😊
Sunny side up eggs. Mmmm nothing better.
Love the idea of using some sweet potatoes!
As a beef lover, I think there could have been at least twice as much corned beef. After all, it’s not potato hash, it’s corned beef hash. Thanks!
Watched this after my dinner thinking I'd be safe. Dammit.
Where did the corn beef come from, did you cook a corned beef.?
Looks delicious!!! Both daughters married ??? Wow boys must be unrecognizable .. where does time go
" Till the taters arr nice an roasted." This is going to be my comeback line for the next week for any question. "Taties" came in a close 2nd, but I think HR would be involved where I work.
Sweet potatos in corn beef hash is different. Too different for me.
I'm irish, NO, & no yams, recipe not even close or close to a variant recipe
Folks, also being Irish, there really are sweet potatoes, they look like bakers, white inside, brown peel/skin & same shape, yams are different, oblong with orange flesh, sweeter, & the # 1 root veggie for vitamins, minerals, etc… in U.S. most sweet potatoes, not yams are grown in the Carolina's
Drew Conway
Allen Trice
Allen Trice
Michelle Holt
The dish looks tasty except for the eggs 🥚 🍳 🍳
If corned beef isn't your thing, use low sodium Spam or Bacon Spam.
The sweet potatoes aren't needed. They take away from the traditional look.
The sweet potatoes aren't needed. They take away from the traditional look.
The sweet potatoes aren't needed. They take away from the traditional look.
The sweet potatoes aren't needed. They take away from the traditional look.
The sweet potatoes aren't needed. They take away from the traditional look.
The sweet potatoes aren't needed. They take away from the traditional look.
The sweet potatoes aren't needed. They take away from the traditional look.