I am wanting to do a ham for Easter, but don't know the first thing about it. Are they precooked/ smoked? Will me smoking it on my egg be overkill? What is the best ham to ask my butcher for? etc then... What temp to cook it? How long etc? Any advice out there would be much appreciated! Thanks Egguniverse.
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Maple-Bourbon Ham
by John Hall (egret)
Ingredients:
Maple-Bourbon Paste (recipe follows)
10-12 # cooked, ready to eat Ham (bone-in Butt or Shank section)
1/2-1 cup Maple Syrup
Cherry and Apple Chunks
Preparation:
The day before smoking, place ham in a pan flat side down. Inject in multiple locations with maple syrup (use more than 1 cup if it will take it).
Smear the Maple-Bourbon Paste all over the exposed surfaces (except flat side). Cover loosely with plastic wrap and put in refrigerator until ready to smoke (You can remove ham from refrigerator up to one hour before cooking).
Stabilize egg at 250℉ with plate setter (legs up) and regular grid on plate setter. Put 3 or 4 good size chunks of wood on coals, then place ham on grid. Cook until internal temperature reaches 140°. (this should take about 5 hours).
Maple-Bourbon Paste:
2 Tbls. pure Maple Syrup
2 Tbls. freshly ground Black Pepper
2 Tbls. Dijon or Honey-Dijon Mustard
1 Tbls. Bourbon
1 Tbls. Vegetable Oil
1 Tbls. Paprika
1 Tbls. Onion Powder
2 tsp. coarse Salt, either Kosher or Sea Salt
Big Lake, Minnesota
2X Large BGE, 1 Mini Max, Stokers, Adjustable Rig
anyone done this with a green ham? I have a green 10-12 pound whole bone in ham ordered. I am trying to get an idea on a timeline. Anyone tried resting a ham in a cooler or oven (or other device) for several hours?
We will leave for Church at 8:40 Sunday morning, and be back home around 11:40. I am concerned how best to cook, and serve the ham, without stressing for the 3 hours I am at church.
resting helps roasts and steaks, but i wouldn't rest it in a cooler, because the idea behind restign a roast/steak is too allow it to cool a bit so that it will hold in juices a little better when you finally cut into it.
keeping a butt in a cooler doesn't need that (at 200 degrees, the moisture is long gone, and any 'wet' is fat and gelatin), and plus it is all mingled togther anyway, not sliced. any juice that spilled out would go right back into the mix.
resting PP in a cooler is good if the PP is done too early and you want to keep it hot. it doesn't benefit like a roast does from a rest.
if you roast it, you can go at 325/350 for a couple hours until 155-160 max. i would pull around 140-145 myself. it's safe at those temps.
personally, i'd dial back to 220 and put it on when i went to church. then bump it when you got home. depending on size, and when you wanna eat, you could put it on when you get home
I had a bone-in half shank, and put the flat side down directly on the grid.
Its only a tablespoon, I would think you could get away with omitting it. You could substitute wth a small amount of vanilla (1 teaspoon?) maybe if you wanted to.
I followed Egret's recipe (used a little less pepper, used only apple chunks, re-applied the paste at the end of the cook to glaze), it turned out terrific. Thanks to Egret and the tips on this forum for a terrific Easter dinner!
@mountaindewbass
Vanilla extract is like 35% alcohol, so if you are not comfortable using bourbon for that reason, you may not want to use vanilla extract either.Steve
Caledon, ON
gonna be kind of tough to get fetal alcohol syndrome from one slice of a ham where a tablespoon of alcohol flavored 12 pounds.... but that's just me being careless
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Steve
Caledon, ON
@mountaindewbass I did a 7# at 250, took about 3.5 hours to hit 138.
And yeah, there is no risk with a tablespoon of bourbon spread over an 8 # ham and cooked for 4 hours. But when you play host, sometimes you gotta accomodate.