Barbecue (alt.food.barbecue) Discuss barbecue and grilling--southern style "low and slow" smoking of ribs, shoulders and briskets, as well as direct heat grilling of everything from burgers to salmon to vegetables.

 
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
  #1 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to alt.food.barbecue
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 719
Default Report on Smithfield Ham - What is it?

I baked an uncooked, cured, non-smoked Smithfield ham yesterday. These are
labeled "Ready to Cook" and are supposed to be cooked to an internal temp.
of 148F. After a fair amount of thought about the risk of dry ham and
endogenous laziness I decided not to do it in the Weber Smokey Mtn. I
followed Alton Brown's recipe, paraphrased below, without the cookies.

Score ham through skin to create 2 inch skin patches. Place a shank half ham
cut side down on baking pan. Put small amount of water in pan to cover the
cut side. Tent the ham tightly with heavy duty foil, & cook for 3 to 4 hours
or until the internal temperature at the deepest part of the meat registers
130 degrees F. You're basically baking in a steam environment. Remove ham
and pull away the diamonds of skin and all but a thin layer of fat. Brush on
a coat of mustard, and sprinkle surface generously with brown sugar. Return
to oven at 350F and bake uncovered to internal temp of 148F, as per
instructions. Rest for one half hour before consuming.

The ham was somewhat marginal. Ham taste was so so, with no smokey taste at
all. It has since occured to me that probably no raw cured ham is going to
have smoke flavor unless someone includes some liquid smoke in the cure.

Swertz commented yesterday that, "The Smithfield hams I buy here are "in
natural juices". Which is the best, least adulterated ham you can buy. The
ham may not weigh more then 7% greater than it's green weight." This raises
the following question.

Does Smithfield sell "Smithfield Hams" from different distributors
throughout the country? My ham was "25% water added", not 7%, and of
marginal quality. I know Cook's hams are now a Smithfield owned product.
They no longer produce uncooked cured hams. Maybe one shouldn't buy ham just
because of the label "Smithfield". Is the Smithfield in Texas from a
different producer than the one from a vendor in Northern California? Is
there a good uncooked cured ham?.

Kent
---------------------
,always anal, searching for the right paper


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Smithfield Ham Report Sqwertz[_25_] Barbecue 23 28-11-2010 03:22 AM
Report on Smithfield Ham - What is it? Kent[_2_] General Cooking 18 19-11-2010 11:07 PM
Smithfield and Proscuitto Ham?? Theron General Cooking 38 16-09-2009 07:27 PM
The Smithfield Ham Saga jmcquown General Cooking 30 16-11-2003 04:18 PM
More on Smithfield ham Christine Dabney General Cooking 13 11-11-2003 09:35 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:01 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 FoodBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Food and drink"