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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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Brooklyn1 wrote:
> On Wed, 16 Nov 2011 20:10:34 -0600, zxcvbob > > wrote: > >> I thought I was supposed to bring the turkey to the church potluck this >> weekend, but I've been asked to bring a ham instead. I've cooked hams >> before, but never paid any attention to how much they serve. >> >> I bought an 10.6 pound "ham with water added" bone-in ham shank today at >> Aldi. It was the largest half-ham in the case. That ought to serve >> 30-something people if it's not the only meat, right? Or should I go >> back and get one of the smaller butts too? > > You'll be shocked to know that a shank half yields little actual meat, > figure on no more than four pounds of edible meat, probably less > because there'll be a lot of shrinkage with a water added ham when > heated, and a lot will be difficult to carve so will be more suitable > for pea soup. I would never serve a bone-in ham at a pot luck... > you'll need someone that knows how to carve that ham on station the > whole time... you can't have thirty filthy handed imbeciles hacking at > it. For thirty I would have purchased a whole ham and boned it prior > to cooking it... then slice it onto a platter. I've served thousands > of those hams, I can bone a ham in under a minute. Tell the truth, > you bought the shank half to save 15¢ a pound. Even a spiral cut ham > would need someone on station to serve... next time buy a whole ham; > remove the aitch bone, slit along the femur and bone it out. Tie the > ham and cook it (you can stuff it if you like). When cooked let it > cool for 15 minutes and slice it onto a platter for service... don't > forget to garnish, and serve a big tub of honey mustard. If you don't > have cooking facilities on site you can prepare it earlier, chill in > your fridge and slice it just prior to service... cold ham is good > too. Aldi didn't have any whole hams, so I got the biggest half I could find which happened to be a shank. Alton Brown recommends using a shank but I don't know why, maybe it tastes better because of the bone, or so you have a nice bone for making soup afterwards... And it was 20¢ cheaper ;-) (OK, you got me) Maybe I ought to go back and get a large butt to go with it. I'll cut it all up at home and take it mostly already sliced and a few hunks, and reheat it there. Won't the ham bone out a lot easier after it's cooked? I'm going to stud it with cloves and glaze with brown sugar and yellow hotdog mustard. Thanks, Bob |
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![]() "zxcvbob" > wrote in message ... > Brooklyn1 wrote: >> On Wed, 16 Nov 2011 20:10:34 -0600, zxcvbob > >> wrote: >> >>> I thought I was supposed to bring the turkey to the church potluck this >>> weekend, but I've been asked to bring a ham instead. I've cooked hams >>> before, but never paid any attention to how much they serve. >>> >>> I bought an 10.6 pound "ham with water added" bone-in ham shank today at >>> Aldi. It was the largest half-ham in the case. That ought to serve >>> 30-something people if it's not the only meat, right? Or should I go >>> back and get one of the smaller butts too? >> >> You'll be shocked to know that a shank half yields little actual meat, >> figure on no more than four pounds of edible meat, probably less >> because there'll be a lot of shrinkage with a water added ham when >> heated, and a lot will be difficult to carve so will be more suitable >> for pea soup. I would never serve a bone-in ham at a pot luck... >> you'll need someone that knows how to carve that ham on station the >> whole time... you can't have thirty filthy handed imbeciles hacking at >> it. For thirty I would have purchased a whole ham and boned it prior >> to cooking it... then slice it onto a platter. I've served thousands >> of those hams, I can bone a ham in under a minute. Tell the truth, >> you bought the shank half to save 15¢ a pound. Even a spiral cut ham >> would need someone on station to serve... next time buy a whole ham; >> remove the aitch bone, slit along the femur and bone it out. Tie the >> ham and cook it (you can stuff it if you like). When cooked let it >> cool for 15 minutes and slice it onto a platter for service... don't >> forget to garnish, and serve a big tub of honey mustard. If you don't >> have cooking facilities on site you can prepare it earlier, chill in >> your fridge and slice it just prior to service... cold ham is good >> too. > > > Aldi didn't have any whole hams, so I got the biggest half I could find > which happened to be a shank. Alton Brown recommends using a shank but I > don't know why, maybe it tastes better because of the bone, or so you have > a nice bone for making soup afterwards... > > And it was 20¢ cheaper ;-) (OK, you got me) > > Maybe I ought to go back and get a large butt to go with it. I'll cut it > all up at home and take it mostly already sliced and a few hunks, and > reheat it there. > > Won't the ham bone out a lot easier after it's cooked? > > I'm going to stud it with cloves and glaze with brown sugar and yellow > hotdog mustard. > > Thanks, > Bob I'd go with dijon or brown mustard rather than yellow mustard. (And yes, the bone will be easier to remove after it's cooked and will be a wonderful addition to bean soup!) Never having served ham for 30 people I have no idea what size you should have bought. But they aren't expecting you to carry the entire meal, are they? Surely there *will* be someone bringing a turkey and others bringing sides. I wouldn't rush out and buy more ham. JMHO Jill |
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