The corned beef must have been a result of the ideologies in Judaism that require a Kosher diet. Still I think that cabbage and corned beef does make for a good combination, but I can see Kolchak's point. It's better as a reuben sandwich. A reuben with fries was my St Patrick's day dinner, and for lunch I had treated myself to a shamrock shake at McDonalds, although I had to hurry up to eat because I had to go to my classroom observations.
My Grandma mentioned that the Reuben was a Jewish idea, but if it is, I don't think they would include the cheese. I'm not sure about the thousand island dressing either. Jewish kosher traditions state that "one must not drown a calf in it's mother's milk" and therefore, dairy and meat products are kept separated. Otherwise, they aren't kosher.
Considering Jewish lived closed to the Irish in communities, I wonder if that might have been how my Great-Grandfather met my Great-Grandmother. Granted, they didn't live near New York city, although where I used to live Irish were common and they even had the St Patty's day parades. I'm pretty sure my Great-Grandmother might have been Irish and English, but I could be wrong about that.
Still I didn't make it into a big thing. I dressed in a green dress coat and a blue shirt underneath with blue earrings. Blue and Green. Both bases covered.
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)