Maple-Glazed Fresh Ham With Hard Cider Sauce
- Total Time
- 2½ to 3 hours; if brining, add 12 to 24 hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1cup kosher salt (if brining)
- ¾cup sugar (if brining)
- 18- to 10-pound butt or shank portion fresh ham (half a leg), skin on
- 1½cups raisins
- ½cup dark rum
- 1cup packed dark brown sugar
- ⅔cup fresh sage leaves
- 4teaspoons dry mustard
- 4teaspoons finely grated lemon zest (from about 2 lemons)
- 8cloves garlic, peeled
- 4teaspoons kosher salt
- 4teaspoons black peppercorns
- 1cup maple syrup
- 1liter hard apple cider (or substitute regular apple cider)
Preparation
- Step 1
If brining the ham, combine salt and white sugar with 2 quarts water in a pot large enough to fit the ham comfortably. Stir well to dissolve. Add ham, cover, and place in refrigerator for 12 to 24 hours. Remove, rinse well, and dry with paper towels.
- Step 2
In a small bowl, combine raisins and rum and allow to sit while ham cooks, at least 2 hours.
- Step 3
Preheat oven to 500 degrees. Place brown sugar, sage, mustard, lemon zest, garlic, salt and peppercorns in a blender or a food processor fitted with a steel blade, and process until smooth.
- Step 4
Using a sharp knife, score entire surface of ham in a crosshatch pattern, cutting down just through skin to the flesh underneath. (If you are cutting to the right depth, the skin will spread apart a bit as you cut.) Rub outside of ham all over with spice mixture, pressing it gently into crosshatch spaces between the skin. Put roast on a rack in a large roasting pan and place in oven.
- Step 5
After 20 minutes, reduce oven setting to 300 degrees. After 1 hour, begin painting ham every 15 minutes or so with maple syrup. Continue roasting until the very center of ham reaches an internal temperature of 145 degrees, 2 to 2½ hours total cooking time. (Begin checking at 1½ hours to be sure.) To check for doneness, insert a meat thermometer into the absolute center of the roast, let it sit for 5 seconds, then take the reading.
- Step 6
While ham is cooking, place cider in a medium saucepan and bring to a boil over high heat. Reduce heat to medium high, and simmer vigorously until liquid is reduced by about half, about 20 minutes.
- Step 7
When ham is done, remove it from roasting pan, cover it loosely with foil, and allow it to rest for 20 to 30 minutes. Tip roasting pan to the side so you can spoon off all the fat from pan juices, then place pan on stove over medium-high heat. Add reduced cider, and bring to a simmer, scraping bottom of pan to free the browned bits. Skim any film off surface and season liquid as needed with salt and pepper. Add rum-soaked raisins, along with any remaining rum, and stir to combine. Pour into a gravy boat.
- Step 8
Carve ham into thick slices, drizzle with raisin-cider sauce and serve, passing remaining sauce separately.
Private Notes
Comments
The initial roasting at 500 produced a lot of smoke. The rub mixture that dripped into the pan also got blackened which resulted in some bitterness in the final sauce. Next time, I'll add water to the roasting pan at the beginning and add more as needed during the time in the oven.
By the way, everyone loved this roast...
The rub became very dark during the initial high temperature cooking. However, I found that the burnt sugar flavor of the sauce (from the darkened rub) added a wonderful complexity to the sauce, resembling mince-meat a bit. A full cup of maple syrup is not necessary --the drippings in the pan can be used for basting after the ham has been cooking for a couple of hours. We cooked a bone-in 15-pound fresh ham and it took about 5 1/2 hours total cooking time to get the center to 145 degrees.
The burnt sugar, hard sider made a superb base for the ham sauce. No smoke in my kitchen. Although I kept the skin on the 12 pound ham cris-crossed by the butcher as directed) I actually added 2 tablespoons of bacon grease to the base. This is just a matter of personal
Just finished cooking the first 20mins at 500f - the sugar-sage mixture is totally blackened & burned. The 6.5pound fresh ham is now back in the over at 300f - we shall see.
The rub became very dark during the initial high temperature cooking. However, I found that the burnt sugar flavor of the sauce (from the darkened rub) added a wonderful complexity to the sauce, resembling mince-meat a bit. A full cup of maple syrup is not necessary --the drippings in the pan can be used for basting after the ham has been cooking for a couple of hours. We cooked a bone-in 15-pound fresh ham and it took about 5 1/2 hours total cooking time to get the center to 145 degrees.
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