Corning beef is laissez-faire DIY, and by that I mean it’s set-it-and-forget-it charcuterie. Pickle a beef brisket for five days, then cook it for a few hours, and you’ll end up with several pounds of luscious corned beef.

For me, the problem was never in the doing. It was in the quantity. Depending on the cut, beef brisket weighs in at between four and 14 pounds. I just couldn’t, I just shouldn’t, have several pounds of corned beef in my refrigerator. I do love it, so I set out to find a variation suited for my small household.

It turns out short ribs make a mighty fine stand-in for brisket, and the resulting pickled meat slices and hashes just like any corned beef brisket. Corned short rib is my answer to authentic, right-sized corned beef.

When shopping, look for thick, bone-in short ribs. I first tested the accompanying recipe with the slim, boneless short ribs commonly sold at the grocery store. They were a disaster: The meat was not very thick and, once cured, was impossible to slice. When I used bone-in short ribs, their generous 2-to-2½-inch-thick slabs of meat proved to be the better option; the resulting corned beef was tender and easy to slice.

It’s easy to cut away the bones at home, separating the thick chunks of beef marbled with fat from the flat bones. When you smear those bones with tomato paste, roast them in a hot oven, then cook them for hours with carrots, onions and plenty of water, a brown, beefy stock for sauces or soups is all yours. Or if you have a deserving dog, abandon all thoughts of stock and use the raw bones to reward good behavior.

To become corned beef, the meat spends plenty of time in salty circumstances. Salt is the tenderizer, the preservative, the flavoring. First, a few days in a wet brine that is salty, sweet and aromatic with mustard and coriander seed, bay leaf and cinnamon. Then the beef cooks in a salty bath until tender.

The choice of which salt to use deserves careful attention. “Corning” is a term that first referred to the size of the salt used for preserving. Corn salt, or large rock-crystal salt, was commonly used in the 19th century to preserve meat for travel by ship. Preserved beef became a significant export from Great Britain, corned, canned and transported across the world.

The days of such corning salt are behind us. I rely on Diamond Crystal kosher salt that weighs in at 45 grams per quarter-cup. Morton’s kosher salt is denser; the same amount weighs 62 grams. Coarse sea salt weighs even more, 67 grams. So if the latter two are the salts in your home, please use a kitchen scale. (Iodized table salt is never the right choice for corning.) The goal is a 5 percent solution for brining and a 5 percent salt bath for cooking. Weighing the salt will ensure the most consistent results.

Keeping the meat submerged requires a plate or weighted dish over the bowl, which may take up valuable refrigerator real estate. A better solution is to pack brine and beef into a zip-top bag from which all the air has been removed. Even better: Vacuum-seal the bag.

Every discussion of cured meat raises the issue of nitrites. To retain a rosy pink appearance, I opt to use Curing Salt #1 (also called Prague Powder, DQ Curing Salt or Pink Salt), which is made up of sodium chloride and sodium nitrite. It is dyed a bright pink to ensure it will not be mistaken for table salt. Nitrites imbue the corned beef with an appealing rosy color. If the idea of using nitrites worries you, skip it, but consider adding a small red beet to the cooking liquid to pink up what otherwise would be drably colored meat.

After the long brine, the beef cooks for hours. Short ribs do not need a brisk boil, so if there is a slow-cooker collecting dust somewhere in your house, corned beef is the perfect occasion to bring it out. Even a low (225 F) oven will do, but cover the pot and make sure the meat stays completely submerged in its the liquid.

Once the short ribs are done, they are ready to be sliced and stacked with Swiss on rye, hashed and fried in duck fat with potatoes and carrots, or cooked further with cabbage and served with a suitable swipe of grainy mustard. This is corned beef for the small household.

Barrow is the author of Mrs. Wheelbarrow’s Practical Pantry: Recipes and Techniques for Year-Round Preserving (W.W. Norton, 2014). She blogs at www.mrswheelbarrow.com.