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Hickory-smoked half ham shank. Ideas? Go!
PNWFoodie
Posts: 1,046
I was gifted by my farmer with an already hickory smoked ham, a huge half shank. I'm not sure egging would add anything to it, other than heating it up, but open for suggestions if you have an idea. If not, how do you use your leftovers? Of course I have my stand-bys, but am looking for inspiration. Go!
XL, JR, and more accessories than anyone would ever need near Olympia, WA
Sandy
Sandy
Comments
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What I do is go ahead and slice it up and package it in quantities that make a great meal. Then Food Saver them and they will stay for months in the freezer. Makes a nice easy to thaw and rewarm meal mid week this winter.Re-gasketing the USA one yard at a time
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And another way - which I just did yesterday myself was this hearty ham and bean "soup" though it is really thick!
RRP’s Ham & Bean Soup
1# navy beans prepared as described below
9 pints of water will be needed in total
3 cups of diced ham
1 left over ham bone, plus any large chunks of fatty meat saved while trimming down the ham bone – especially that which may still have some of the exterior glaze!
¼ pound butter
1 cup grated carrots (typically 1 large one)
1 cup diced onion (1 medium onion)
1 cup thinly diced celery (about 2 large stalks)
2 tsp freshly ground pepper (90 grinds)
3 tsp salt
1 tsp cumin powder
1 tsp chili powder
2 T sifted flour
½ t Wright’s concentrated hickory liquid smoke
½ t Kitchen Bouquet
Method A. Sort through beans for any bad ones, rinse and place in large pot with 4 pints of cold water. Bring to a boil for three minutes, turn off heat, but leave on the burner and keep covered for one hour and 15 minutes.
Or Method B which I really prefer! This is a recap from Cook’s Illustrated in Nov ’10 issue: For 1 pound of dried Navy beans dissolve 3 tablespoons of table salt in 3 quarts of cold water. Let soak for 16 to 24 hours at room temperature. Drain and rinse well before proceeding
Drain beans and rinse again. Add 4 pints of cold water, plus the ham bone. Simmer for 3 hours. First hour uncovered and next 2 hours with cover slightly ajar.
Sauté the carrots, celery and onions in ¼ lb of butter. Season with salt, pepper, comino powder and chili powder. In a separate shaker place 2 T of sifted flour and THEN add 1 pint of tap hot water and mix thoroughly to make a slurry and set aside.
Remove the ham bone after carefully saving any additional ham from it that becomes visible after the long simmer. Also remove the chunks of fat. Add the diced ham, sautéed vegetables and flour slurry to the pot of beans. Add the Wright’s smoke and Kitchen Bouquet and stir well. Heat thoroughly on simmer uncovered for 30 minutes.
For reference just 1 pint of this well mixed hearty soup is a nice size serving. Normally this recipe yields 7 pints of bodacious very thick ham and bean soup. Enjoy!!!Re-gasketing the USA one yard at a time -
The last few that I have done were already smoked with either hickory or maple. I like to deep score the ham and reheat/resmoke on the egg with either cherry or maple. Maple being my favorite. By scoring you are getting deep penetration of the smoke and will definitely change the flavor profile of the pre cooked ham. Then use the leftovers like Ron suggested, that is if you have any leftover-----------------------------------------analyze adapt overcome2008 -Large BGE. 2013- Small BGE and 2015 - Mini. Henderson, Ky.
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@RRP Wow! What an incredibly detailed and thoughtful response. Thank you! I've only ever done pea soup with left-over ham and the store was out of dried split peas. Thanks to your inspiration and such truly detailed instructions, I know what dinner tomorrow will be! Thank you again.
XL, JR, and more accessories than anyone would ever need near Olympia, WA
Sandy -
and thank you as well. Trust me - this is simply delicious and the extra ham revealed on the ham bone after the 3 hour simmer is an incredibly tasty addition to the soup. That typically adds a 4th cup of ham to the mixture so it is very thick - in fact thick enough that you can skip the 2 T of shifted flour if you wish.PNWFoodie said:@RRP Wow! What an incredibly detailed and thoughtful response. Thank you! I've only ever done pea soup with left-over ham and the store was out of dried split peas. Thanks to your inspiration and such truly detailed instructions, I know what dinner tomorrow will be! Thank you again.
Re-gasketing the USA one yard at a time -
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Ron, that sounds wonderful! Wish ham didn't have so much sodium. Almost half my daily max in a lousy 4 oz "serving" so I just try not to even think about it. It is THE food I miss most. Haven't had a bite in well over a year now. Sigh.
I smoked some fresh hocks a while back. No salt. That was for a pot of pintos as I recall. Just wasn't the same.I hate it when I go to the kitchen for food and all I find are ingredients!
MichaelCentral Connecticut -
@Carolina Q seems you could cure your own to control this. The one I cured was not overly salty. I'm not a big fan of country cured ham because it is salty.LBGE 2013 & MM 2014Die Hard HUSKER & BRONCO FANFlying Low & Slow in "Da Burg" FL
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Used to LOVE country ham biscuits and mustard. Not often, but got my fix from time to time.NPHuskerFL said:@Carolina Q seems you could cure your own to control this. The one I cured was not overly salty. I'm not a big fan of country cured ham because it is salty.
. I wasn't even thinking of that though, just plain old ham. Never considered curing my own. Might be worth looking into. Thanks! I hate it when I go to the kitchen for food and all I find are ingredients!
MichaelCentral Connecticut -
@Carolina Q I'm no expert. But, the wet cure I did was the best ham I've ever had. Tasted like ham, moist and very flavorful and not at all salty.LBGE 2013 & MM 2014Die Hard HUSKER & BRONCO FANFlying Low & Slow in "Da Burg" FL
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