Originally posted by mdvipond
Cracking idea on the ham. Roasted in stout, you say? Don't suppose you've got a basic recipe for that have you?
Fortunately I have the day off today, so can grab my ham recipe from downstairs:
You need:
- a large unsmoked gammon joint (or a couple of smaller ones)
- 250ml of stout
- 250 ml of hot vegetable stock
- 1 red onion finally chopped.
- some whole cloves
- Honeycup Prepared "Honey" mustard if you can get it (I use this - very sweet and sticky and fab with ham), if not Dijon or similar.
- Demerara sugar
Pre-heat oven to 180'C. Calculate the cooking time for the gammon based on 55 minutes per kilo + 30 minutes (so a long time if you have one big ham!).
Place the ham in a deep roasting tin (with string still on) and add the stock, stout and chopped red onion. Cover loosely with foil and place in the oven.
About an hour from the end of cooking, remove joint from oven. Discard the foil and trasnfer the meat to a board. Using a sharp knife, remove the string from the gammon and cute away the skin (leaving the fatty layer beneath intact). Score the fat diagnoally to make diamond shapes. Place the gammon into a roasting tin lined with parchment paper (stops the sugar burning to it). Smear the honey mustard all over the fat - coating it completely. Then take a clove and stud it into the centre of each diamond. Then pat on the demerara sugar. Return to the oven for the last hour of cooking. This whole stage can be a bit messy - so full protective gear suggested [ii]
When gammon is fully cooked, remove from the oven and allow to rest for 20 minutes before carving.
One of the things I love about doing baked ham is the SMELL... the whole house smells great and quests tend to go "HHhhmmmm" when they walk through the door. I also like to shoe the gammon to guests before I carve it (since it generally looks golden and rather lovely).
There re plenty of roast/baked ham receipes out there - just finding one that suits you. The most important things are making sure you have the time to do it (doesn't require much prep, does require quite a lot of cooking time) and make sure the ham is cooked through properly (hams come in a variety of sizes and shapes and they are all a little different to cook)
You can cook the ham the day before, but it is so much better and more tender if you do it right before they arrive. I try to time it that I do the "messy" bit just a bit before they arrive. Douphinoise (or similar) potatoes, a fairly simple salad (something rocket or spinach based) and a nice fruity cumberland sauce go with it very well. Simple, but great flavour.
Another dessert you could look at is "Eton Mess" (which can be "cheated" -
http://www.deliaonline.com/recipes/chea ... 59,RC.html etc). Personally I like tarte au citron after roast ham and dauphinoise potatoes because it provided a tartness to balance the richness and creaminess of the previous course. And if you intend to have a cheese course afterwards... that would be more rich/creaminess.
Boo