Join Culinate

With a free Culinate membership, you can:

  • Create your own recipe collections
  • Queue recipes for later use
  • Blog your culinary endeavors
  • Be part of our online community of cooks
  • And much more…
Join Now

Roasted Fresh Ham with a Maple-Spice Glaze

From the book Ham by and

Culinate editor’s note: Unfortunately, our recipe format doesn’t accommodate the number of people this recipe will serve, as specified in the book: “6 teenage boys, 16 adults, or 26 twentysomething models.” Now you know.

Introduction

After our existential ordeal with Wilbur, Bruce wanted to develop a recipe that honored the first taste of the meat by using the simplest preparation: roasted, not fussed up. So here’s his basic recipe for a fresh ham. Yes, it requires several hours of slow cooking. Open another bottle of Pinot Noir and relax.

Ingredients

1 (8- to 10-pound) bone-in fresh ham, preferably from the shank end, any rind removed
1 tsp. sugar
1 tsp. ground cinnamon
½ tsp. ground allspice
½ tsp. ground cloves
½ tsp. grated nutmeg
½ tsp. salt
½ cup maple syrup

Steps

  1. Put the Dickensian joint in a large roasting pan, preferably one that’s shiny enough to reflect lots of ambient heat and not so flimsy that it tips willy-nilly when you pick it up. Set the oven rack as high as it can go and still afford the ham at least 2 inches of head space. Leave the roast in its pan out on the counter and fire the oven up to 325 degrees.
  2. Mix the sugar, cinnamon, allspice, cloves, nutmeg, and salt in a small bowl. Wash and dry your hands, then smooth the spice mixture all over the ham’s external surface. Work it down into some of the crevices, but be careful to avoid any deep-tissue massage. A ham is a complex structure of muscle groups; too much massage and they can come apart like Goldie Hawn in “Death Becomes Her.”
  3. Cover the whole kit and caboodle with aluminum foil, shove it in the oven, and leave it alone for 3½ hours, while you go do whatever it is you do when a big, sweating hunk of meat is roasting in your oven.
  4. Peel off the aluminum foil. Baste the ham with about half the maple syrup, preferably using a basting brush. Take it easy so you don’t knock off the spice coating. Use small strokes — think Impressionism, not Abstract Expressionism. (Or just dribble the syrup off a spoon.)
  5. Continue roasting the ham, uncovered this time, basting every 15 minutes or so with more maple syrup as well as any pan drippings, until an instant-read meat thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the meat without touching bone registers 170 degrees, about 1¼ hours. If it starts to singe or turn too dark, tent it loosely with foil, uncovering it just at the last to get it back to crunchy-crisp.

Related article: The gateway meat

This content is from the book Ham by Mark Scarbrough and Bruce Weinstein.

Subscribe
Comments
There are no comments on this item
Add a comment
Unrated
Rating

Think before you type

Culinate welcomes comments that are on-topic, clean, and courteous. For the benefit of the community we reserve the right to delete comments that contain advertising, personal attacks, profanity, or which are thinly disguised attempts to promote another website.

Please enter your comment

Format: Bare URLs are automatically linked; use this style: [http://www.example.com "place text to be linked here"] for prettier links. You may specify *bold* or _italic_ text. No HTML please.

Please identify yourself

Not a member? Sign up!

Please prove that you’re not a computer


Advertisement
Our Table

Egg-boiling essentials

Mark Bittman’s gone back to basics

In his new book, the fundamentals of cooking take center stage.

Subscribe
Graze: Bites from the Site
The Produce Diaries

Morels

Pleasure in the hunt

Dinner Guest Blog

A quiche lesson

The crux is the crust

Features

Fabulous favas

A green herald of summer

Dinner Guest Blog

Wabi-sabi cookery

Cooking is a constant history lesson

Most Popular Articles

Editor’s Choice