Here, we've rounded up everything you need to know about how to make a ham-including shopping tips and a delicious recipe for a honey-Dijon glaze. From slow-cooker ham to root beer glazed ham, once you know how to cook a ham, the possibilities are endless. "Over the years, I've made ham every which way," she says. Ree Drummond loves serving ham because it doesn't require a ton of effort-plus, it's so darn tasty. Of course, it doesn't have to be a holiday to enjoy a good ham recipe-you can make it for Sunday supper or any time you want to enjoy a ham sandwich during the week. It's often served for Easter brunch, Christmas dinner, and even as an alternative to turkey on Thanksgiving. Whew! I’m exhausted just typing it! I really need the pressure cooker to rescue me when I do this task! I’m determined to figure it out, but ham is a pretty expensive item to experiment on.If you're looking for an impressive holiday centerpiece that also happens to feed a crowd, you can't go wrong with a big, traditional ham. (Cooks Illustrated has long instructions, as usual, that involve pre-warming the ham in hot water for 90 minutes putting it in a cooking bag, and heating it in a 250 degree oven until it reaches an internal temp of 100 degrees F glazing it and puttting it back in a 350 degree oven for 10 minutes to melt the glaze. Since it is already cooked, you are just warming it up. We find that the ham is very juicy at that temp. But I’m going for a target internal temp of 100 degrees F per Cooks Illustrated instructions (prior to glazing and putting it in the oven for a few minutes to melt the glaze) because the ham is already cooked and you just want to warm it up. I’m going to try it again, but I’ll wrap it in foil per your instructions, Barbara, and make sure I buy a smaller ham. It could have been USER ERROR (my fault) because I overfilled my 8 quart stove top and it took a long time to come up to pressure, so long that I think I actually didn’t need to pressure cook it for any length of time. Thank you for this post, Barbara! We recently tried Miss Vickie’s instructions for spiral sliced ham in the PC and ended up ruining an expensive ham because the ham came out overcooked (WAY overcooked). And I guess putting the PC cooked ham under the broiler with glaze will defeat the purpose of PC & dry out the ham? Any suggestions? Love your great recipes & instructions, never fail for us newbs. Barbara, what are your thoughts to convert to PC? I’m thinking popping glaze in a pan in the air fryer or oven to brown. I would think glazing the ham won’t work in the pressure cooker as it would just run off into the foil. Think sticky, gooey, & browned like barbeque ribs, pineapple browned/carmelized like upside down cake. Glaze ham last 1/2 hour of cooking, do not cover with foil. Cook over med heat, stirring until thickened.Ĥ. Mix brown sugar, cornstarch, salt in 1 qt panģ. Goodbye microwave or oven reheating & dried out meats! For anyone else using a plain spiral ham, here is a glaze my Mom always used for a baked ham:Ĩ-1/2 oz crushed pineapple, undrained in syrupġ. Also reheating other meats in the pressure cooker is a game changer that never occurred to me, duh. Oh my, this one is a keeper! Honey Baked Ham stores are in a galaxy far, far away from where I am, but a precooked spiral would work.
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