Well what do you know? The holiday tip list is longer than one item. Ha ha.
Here's the tip:
If you'll be baking a ham for Christmas or New Year's, don't forget that you can use all parts of that ham. This particularly applies to bone-in hams.
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image:https://www.simplyrecipes.com/recipes/glazed_baked_ham/ |
Four parts of a bone-in ham to make sure you use
1-Obviously, all of the meat is useful as is.
2-Liquid drippings from baking. Drippings are a combination of caramelized meat juices and liquified fat. This liquid makes a delicious gravy, even if you don't plan on using the gravy with the meal for which you baked the ham. The gravy would be wonderful on biscuits or mashed potatoes another day. Like other parts of the ham, the drippings can be frozen until needed.
3-Ham bones make delicious, flavorful stock. I like to oven-roast the bone after just about all of the meat has been picked off of it. I place the bone on a baking sheet with raised edges and roast at about 375 degrees F for 20 minutes. Then I place the bone into water and simmer for several hours. The baking sheet may have some fat on it from roasting the bone. I pour that off into a container and save it in the fridge to use in cooking. Once the bone has simmered in the water for a few hours, I remove it from the heat, cool and pick the remaining meat off to use in soup, pouring the stock into freezer containers.
Most folks dispose of the bone at this point. However, there is such a thing as "second stock," where the now-spent bone is simmered with vegetables and herbs in fresh water, extracting the last bits of flavor and nutrients (such as collagen). Second stock can be used as liquid in soups and stews, or as cooking liquid for vegetable dishes (where ever you might splash a bit of water). Second stock can also be used to dilute and stretch a first-run batch of stock when making soup.
Ham stock is really great in split pea and navy bean soups, as well as to make a nice binding sauce for casseroles when combined with some milk, flour, and seasonings. If you can't make the stock the same week that you bake the ham, wrap the bone in foil and/or plastic and toss it in the freezer to do later.
4-And finally, all of the fat on the ham can be rendered to be used in cooking later. I store our rendered ham fat in the freezer and chop off a bit as needed when cooking.
To render the fat from a ham, dice the ham fat into 1/4-inch dices. It doesn't matter if there's a little bit of meat on the fat. Dice it all. In a heavy-bottomed pot, heat the fat dices over low, stirring occasionally. The fat will liquify slowly. When the fat is just about all rendered, you will have both liquid fat and small, dark and crispy bits, known as the cracklings. Cracklings are tasty for topping bowls of soup, fresh salads, added to cornbread or biscuit dough, or topping creamy pasta dishes, adding flavor much like bacon bits. Any cracklings that I'm not using right away I store in the freezer. Also, if you don't think you'll get to rendering ham fat in a timely manner, you can cut off and freeze the pieces of fat until a day that you do have time for rendering.
We use ham fat for sautéing veggies, cooking egg dishes, and pan or oven-frying. If the ham fat seems to have too over-powering of a taste for a particular dish, I dilute it with part vegetable oil for that dish.
Years ago I posted about rendering ham fat for use in cooking later. See this post. I get many clicks on this post during the holiday season from Thanksgiving through New Years. So I thought some of you might also be interested in these how-to's.
I feel that using as much of a meat product as possible not only saves some money, but it's also a respectful thing to do for the animal used for cooking, and it spares other foods in the chain for the global population. *stepping off my soap box now*
I was at WinCo this morning. Their hams are priced at $1.89 for a butt portion bone-in ham. Fred Meyer has bone-in hams on sale this week for 97 cents/ lb with a $25 purchase. If I can think of $25 worth of food or household goods to buy at Fred Meyer, that may be the way to go. Will you be baking a ham this holiday season?
I usually don't process the meat off a ham bone, I just put the whole bone into the pot of whatever I'm cooking --usually some kind of beans. It adds nice flavor and bits of meat to the dish. But I can see the benefit to processing it before freezing it. We're taking a ham to my FIL's house for Christmas, but we will leave the leftovers for him.
ReplyDeleteHi Live and Learn,
DeleteIt sounds like you've found a way to use all parts of the ham that works for you!
I'm sure your father-in-law will really appreciate the leftover ham. With a household of one, I bet cooking for himself can be something of a chore. Gifting him the leftovers means the meat part of a meal will be taken care for a little while at least.
Great information, Lili! Thank you for the refresher. (I've been on of the clicks to the previous post in past years.) I'm definitely a "ham for Christmas" person (also a "turkey for Thanksgiving" and sometimes "turkey for New Year's" person, as that's the way my mom always did it. We had a weird year last year, so actually we'll be finally cooking the ham DH bought during last holiday season sales when DS visits before Christmas. DH grew up in a "prime rib for Christmas" household, and we have one from the local beef we bought; so that'll be the plan for Christmas Day. I'm pretty underwhelmed by prime rib, personally; but it'll be fun to plan a different meal to compliment it. :) Sara
ReplyDeleteHi Sara,
DeleteHow fortuitous that you already have both the ham for the family celebration when your son can be there and the prime rib for the actual Christmas Day!
My mother always did some sort of beef roast for Christmas Day and ham for New Years Day. I've been all over the map for Christmas Day, rarely doing the same thing twice. I'm still working on this year's menu. We've begin serving more meat for family gatherings, as my entire family seems to be eating less carbs and more proteins. So I'm thinking of the different meats we'll have. But I also need to think about what would be easiest on Christmas Day.
I rendered beef fat yesterday, using the same technique as I do for ham. I'm glad to have ways to use all of the parts of the beef we buy.
Pea soup with a ham bone is the best! We typically have ham for Christmas (like you, Sara!) and my husband will likely purchase an additional ham to cook up at another date. We portion and freeze the leftovers, as they make easy and tasty additions to soups and casseroles. Ham stock is my favorite to use in my ham and potato soup. Thank you for your additional ideas, Lili!
ReplyDeleteHi Kris,
DeleteThat sounds like a great plan to buy an extra ham to use for future meals. I've thought about that this past week, too. Most of these refrigerated hams have expiration dates a couple of months out. So I would have some time to think how I'd like to use a second ham before the need to either cook it or freeze it.
Yum, your ham and potato soup Ade with ham stock sounds delicious! Have you ever made a loaded baked potato soup? The best ones are topped with cheddar cheese, sour cream, chives or green onions, parsley, bacon and/or ham bits -- sounds tasty to me.
We'll have ham for New Year's (traditional meal in my family). My use-it-up is to simmer the ham bone with onions and a bit of garlic along with green beans and potatoes. I'll pull the last bits of ham off the bone before serving. I've made bean soup or cooked lentils in the leftover broth.
ReplyDeleteI'm getting hungry reading your description! Thanks for sharing.
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