IWETHEY v. 0.3.0 | TODO
1,095 registered users | 0 active users | 0 LpH | Statistics
Login | Create New User
IWETHEY Banner

Welcome to IWETHEY!

New OK, I did the turkey for Thanksgiving . .
. . so for Christmas I decided to do a ham - I'd never done a ham before.

Sor first I bought a ham that seemed reasonable, and then I started researching hams - and soon I knew far more about hams than I had ever thought there was to know about hams.

Naturally, I wrote it all up. I don't consider this document anywhere near done (there's still a lot I have to learn about hams), but I'm putting it up for comment anyway - [link|http://www.aaxnet.com/clove/ingredients/ham.html|Ham & Cured Pork].

As for my ham, it came out ugly compared to the magazine pictures (but I've figured out how to make pretty ones) - but it sure tasted plenty good. I basted with apple cider and used the apple glaze.
[link|http://www.aaxnet.com|AAx]
New "more ... than I ... thought there was to know about hams"
Which is probably the same thing you're going to say when you decide to research mustard.



One thing in the article I had to read twice to get:
Back Bacon - what they call Canadian bacon in Canada and England.
First reading it sounded like you were saying that in Canada and England they call it Canadian Bacon. You might want:
the Canadian and British term for what Americans call Canadian Bacon.



Black Forest Ham, by the way, is great sliced with swiss on pumpernickel with Russian (or thousand island) dressing and grilled. Yumm. Great with beer.


One note about SPAM.[1] The front shoulder of the pig is very difficult to carve quickly and efficiently. A Hormel engineer was trying to figure out how to get more of the meat off that part of the pig faster and came up with pressure cooking the whole lot and canning whatever came off the bones. So SPAM is one of those foods that would never exist except as an side-effect of mechanization.


In a couple of your recipes you mention removing the skin after pulling the ham from the oven. Is this something that will just peel off easily or do you need welding gloves and long-handled tools?


I wish I'd read this before I froze all that leftover ham a while back. Would have saved me the disappointment when I took a pack out. I don't know is this is the common way for it to degrade, but it tasted very salty. Nearly inedible.




[1] And proof that I'm a History Channel and Food Network geek.
===

Purveyor of Doc Hope's [link|http://DocHope.com|fresh-baked dog biscuits and pet treats].
[link|http://DocHope.com|http://DocHope.com]
New All too easily.
The fat under the skin will be soft, runny and slippery. You make one cut through the skin and just unwind it, but it's likely to pull away fat unevenly around it, so you aren't going to get that "picture perfect" ham this way.

Thanks for the suggestions.
[link|http://www.aaxnet.com|AAx]
New More dry comments
According to my co-worker from Bologna, some prosciutto from northern Italy (near the Alps) is smoked.

Jamon Serrano is normally sliced much thicker than prosciutto, but still fairly thin. Two good places for Spanish food are [link|http://www.tienda.com/indepth/jamoniberico.html|La Tienda ] and [link|http://www.donajuana.com/|La Espanola Meats] in Harbor City, CA (which also has real Horchata de Chufa made from tiger nuts, which is good but nowhere near as good as fresh Horchata de Chufa)

If you want to get really fancy, there's [link|http://www.tienda.com/indepth/jamoniberico.html|Jamon Iberico] made from the black foot Iberian pig, which is over $600 for a whole ham. I've never had it, but based on having eaten Lomo Iberico in Spain, I'd say it's very good.

I really do love dry cured European hams, and am glad that they are now available in the US at many high end supermarkets (the USDA finally let them in again around 5 years ago).

Tony
New Tony lives! :)
Alex

The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt. -- Bertrand Russell
New Indeed... I was beginning to wonder where he'd got to.
     OK, I did the turkey for Thanksgiving . . - (Andrew Grygus) - (5)
         "more ... than I ... thought there was to know about hams" - (drewk) - (1)
             All too easily. - (Andrew Grygus)
         More dry comments - (tonytib) - (2)
             Tony lives! :) -NT - (a6l6e6x) - (1)
                 Indeed... I was beginning to wonder where he'd got to. -NT - (CRConrad)

Hence these societies employ their own versions of summary judgment and Rule 11 of the aforementioned Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
39 ms