4616
9
recipe
Glazed Spiral-Sliced Ham Recipe - America's Test Kitchen
You can bypass the 90-minute soaking time, but the heating time will increase to 18 to 20 minutes per pound for a cold ham. If there is a tear or hole in the ham's inner covering, wrap it in several layers of plastic wrap before soaking it in hot water. Instead of using the plastic oven bag, the ham may be placed cut-side down in the roasting pan and covered tightly with foil, but you will need to add 3 to 4 minutes per pound to the heating time. If using an oven bag, be sure to cut slits in the bag so it does not burst. We've included two optional glazes.
Glazed Spiral-Sliced Ham
Serves 12 to 14, with leftovers
Throwing a ham in the oven, slathering on some glaze, and waiting often yields dried-out, leathery meat with a sticky, saccharine exterior.
Ham should be moist and tender, with a glaze that complements but doesn't overwhelm the meat.
Eight answers produce a road map to producing great ham:
-We favor bone-in hams that have been spiral-sliced. As a rule of thumb, allow about 1/2 pound of ham per person. Unless you are feeding a very large crowd, we recommend a half ham.
-Avoid labels that read "ham with water added" or "ham and water products." Hams labeled "with natural juices" taste best.
-Whole ham is the entire leg of the animal. Half hams are available in two cuts: shank (the bottom part of the leg) and sirloin (the portion of the leg closer to the rump). We've found the sirloin end to be meatier and less fatty, although a bit harder to carve.
-You don't have to cook the ham, but most people prefer a warm ham, often with a glaze. We found the ideal serving temperature is between 110 and 120 degrees—any higher and it can dry out.
-To keep the ham moist, soak the ham in warm water for 90 minutes before roasting, then roast it in an oven bag in a 250-degree oven.
-We've found that oven bags produce the moistest ham in the least amount of time. If you don't have an oven bag, you can wrap the ham in aluminum foil, although this will require a longer roasting period.
-For glaze, don't use the stuff in the packet that may be attached to the ham; make your own and follow our instructions.
-A 15-minute rest raises the internal temperature by 5 to 15 degrees, allowing you to reduce the baking time—and less oven time means a moister ham.
Equipment Corner
Tasting Lab
Science Desk
|