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| General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On Sat 21 Jan 2006 06:37:51p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it zxcvbob?
Nancy Young wrote: "Wayne Boatwright" wayneboatwright_at_gmail.com wrote On Sat 21 Jan 2006 06:03:02p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Nancy Young? "Bill" wrote I have some experience cooking Country Ham! I like to take "center slices" vacuum packed from the grocery store and just pop them into the microwave for two to three minutes. They make a perfect accompanyment to fried eggs, bisquits and grits. Also, you can make "red eye" gravy by stirring a little coffee into the drippings off the ham in a frying pan. I get those once in a while, I like that for dinner, I know it's not gore-met but hey, dinner's on the table in a flash. Anyway, last time this ham slice thing came up, I mentioned the water content and this surprised someone, so I doublechecked at the store. Yup, ham slice, a good 25% water by weight. Are you sure that was *country* ham, Nancy? It's rarely injected with anything. In fact, it's usually on the dry side unless it's soaked before cooking. Oh, No! I know he said that, I assumed he was talking about the same type of product I was, I haven't been playing along in the ham discussion ... I have read different explanations what that is, I wouldn't presume to say for sure. In english, I don't know for sure what a country ham is because I've seen different descriptions. I was only talking about the ham slices you buy vacuum packed. nancy "Country ham" is usually dry-cured (sometimes a little curing solution is injected around the bone as insurance against spoilage.) It must lose at least 11% (I think that's the right percentage) of its green weight during curing and aging. So it has *less* water in it than it started out with, unlike Nancy's ham slice that was 25% added water. Yep, I think your percentage is correct. -- Wayne Boatwright Õ¿Õ¬ ________________________________________ Okay, okay, I take it back! UnScrew you! |
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"Wayne Boatwright" wayneboatwright_at_gmail.com wrote Most supermarkets carry the type you bought, usually sugar-cured and somewhat smoked. There are several different types that fit the category of country hams, but they are usually cured using salt and are almost always smoked. IMHO, they are almost inedible unless they are soaked before cooking, but they are really delicious if prepared properly. I have actually seen those for sale in a couple of Walmarts, but rarely if ever in a supermarket. Of course, the availability of country ham in stores is fairly dependent on where you live. In the Southern US you can find them in far more places. I like both types, and they each have a place on the table. I like to grill the sugar-cured ham slices, then smear with a little mustard, sprinkle with brown sugar, and return to the grill for a minutes or two. That's how I like to make them, except in a pan on the stove, usually. But the kind I mentioned, that's the only type I've seen sold in a supermarket, as far as vacuum packed. Just your everyday ham slice thing. I get the thick cut when I see it. Even with the high water percentage, it's still a bargain, again I know it's not fancy food or anything. I know, not the holy grail of ham! (smile) Matter of fact, putting it on my shopping list right now. nancy |
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On Sat 21 Jan 2006 07:04:59p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Nancy
Young? "Wayne Boatwright" wayneboatwright_at_gmail.com wrote Most supermarkets carry the type you bought, usually sugar-cured and somewhat smoked. There are several different types that fit the category of country hams, but they are usually cured using salt and are almost always smoked. IMHO, they are almost inedible unless they are soaked before cooking, but they are really delicious if prepared properly. I have actually seen those for sale in a couple of Walmarts, but rarely if ever in a supermarket. Of course, the availability of country ham in stores is fairly dependent on where you live. In the Southern US you can find them in far more places. I like both types, and they each have a place on the table. I like to grill the sugar-cured ham slices, then smear with a little mustard, sprinkle with brown sugar, and return to the grill for a minutes or two. That's how I like to make them, except in a pan on the stove, usually. But the kind I mentioned, that's the only type I've seen sold in a supermarket, as far as vacuum packed. Just your everyday ham slice thing. I get the thick cut when I see it. Even with the high water percentage, it's still a bargain, again I know it's not fancy food or anything. I know, not the holy grail of ham! (smile) Matter of fact, putting it on my shopping list right now. It doesn't have to fancy to taste good. :-) Some of my favorite foods are I guess what you'd call comfort foods, or just old-fashioned home cooking. -- Wayne Boatwright Õ¿Õ¬ ________________________________________ Okay, okay, I take it back! UnScrew you! |
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On 22 Jan 2006 02:19:48 +0100, Wayne Boatwright
wayneboatwright_at_gmail.com wrote: On Sat 21 Jan 2006 05:48:45p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Bill? On 19 Jan 2006 16:52:50 -0800, wrote: Why are we cooking country ham? We eat Prosciutto. (Italy cured ham) without cooking why cook U.S. Cured ham? I am thinking that on my next visit to Billy's Pork Store in eastern NC that I am going to ask him to: 1. cut me a two inch slab of the center cut 2. clean up the outside 3. debone the slab 4. adjust his slicer to shave 5. slice down the center cut two inch slab 6. eat it COLD Will it kill me? Thanks Doug Clark Hey Doug! I have some experience cooking Country Ham! I like to take "center slices" vacuum packed from the grocery store and just pop them into the microwave for two to three minutes. They make a perfect accompanyment to fried eggs, bisquits and grits. Also, you can make "red eye" gravy by stirring a little coffee into the drippings off the ham in a frying pan. If you want to remove the saltiness, just get some water boiling in a frying pan and through the ham slice in for a "bath". It will soak that salt right out in 20 seconds then you can heat it as I said before in the microwave to get it ready to serve. I can't imagine zapping a slice of country in the MW, whether it's center cut and vacuum packed or not. My family (Mississippi roots where country ham abounds) always soaked slices, or even the whole ham, overnight in milk, then dried thoroughly before frying or baking. It not only reduces the saltiness but also helps to rehydrate the meat. oh yes Wayne! You would be surprised as I was the first time I tried it! When you open a vacuum package of country ham the meat feels like it is as moist as bacon when you open a vacuum package of bacon. Just try this, take a paper plate, put a paper towel on the plate, lay a center slice of country ham on the paper towel, lay another paper towel on top of the ham slice and pop it into the microwave for say two minutes. You will hear it start sizzling about a minute into the cooking. When I was a kid I would go to my grandfather's brother's farm in rural North Carolina and get country hams he had dry cured. My Dad even cured some at home one time. He got three fresh hams from the local slaughter house, lined an old foot locker with newspaper, poured salt in the bottom about three inches deep, (this is the part I don't remember too clearly-I think he rubbed borax and black pepper all over the fresh hams) then he layed them down on the thick bed of salt, then he just poured salt into that foot locker to cover those hams up with salt. They were encased in salt. He left them like this for maybe a week of so letting the salt absorb into the meat. Then he took them out and rubbed all the exterior salt off of them and put them in cloth sacks and hung them up to age for a while. My great uncle must have been pretty good at curing country hams because there were several Doctor's who would drive out to his farm and purchase hams he had cured from him! Bill |
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On Sat, 21 Jan 2006, Nancy Young wrote: Oh, No! I know he said that, I assumed he was talking about the same type of product I was, I haven't been playing along in the ham discussion ... I have read different explanations what that is, I wouldn't presume to say for sure. In english, I don't know for sure what a country ham is because I've seen different descriptions. I was only talking about the ham slices you buy vacuum packed. nancy Tee hee hee. You, me, and most of the country. "Country ham" and "City ham" are marketing terms somebody made up along the way. "Country ham", for commercial purposes, describes a fully preserved smoked ham. It requires no refrigeration. It is very salty and very dry. It needs to be soaked in order to rehydrate before it is prepared. The term "country ham" refers to the kind of hams people preserved at home in a smoke house before the days of refrigeration. Back in "those days", pork was preserved by smoking or by curing. Curing always involved salt, but some people had different flavorings that they added to make it unique to them. Curing didn't involve any smoking. Curing is more difficult and more tricky (it is easier to "lose" meat), so most commercial hams today are smoked. I haven't seen a cured ham since I was a kid. Things like bacon, salt pork, fat back, and streak of lean are still cured. The rest of the hog, is generally, sold fresh today. When the hogs are killed and the hams are "fresh" they are called "green". Green hams can be found in the supermarket. "City hams" cover a variety of hams, most are boneless, closely trimmed of fat, and devoid of rind - such as the kind you can buy in a loaf shape or in a can. Also included are the bone-in, partially cured/smoked hams. Technically, "they" call anything that is not fully smoked "city hams". Elaine, too |
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