The Bloke On Who Wants To Be A...
Film, Media & TV1 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Corned beef because corns of salt were rubbed into beef to keep it from spoiling pre-refigeration. Brine is now used rather than dry salt cure, but the name is still the same.
If you lose the key to the tin - traditional shape, doesn't roll and easy to stack - plus the meat is easy to slice ina rectangle rather than a roll - use a traditional can opener which easily gets round the corners. Chill before opening and the meat is easier to slice.
The key is provided to allow you to open the can without having to resort to an alternative can-opener. When cans were first widely introduced, opening them was a real problem involving a hammer and chisel! You may have seen the 'bull's head' type of early can-opener in antique shops or car boot sales. Or here These were highly dangerous to use - the knife-edge would often slip and stab the hand holding the can, and they left a really jagged edge on the can and lid. At the time, the corned beef can with its key opener was actually many times safer to open.
These days, lots of cans have a ring-pull lid - and there's no reason why corned beef cans shouldn't have them. In the meantime, it's best to do as nickmo says and use a cheapo (69p) opener - it'll get round the tight corners OK. Open both ends and push out the contents. Corned beef hash - mmm!