Food

Posted on
Page
of 1,361
First Prev
/ 1,361
Last Next
  • Thank you, boys and girls... One more thing to stop me writing lyrics, much appreciated... 😉

  • the ice cream maker / bread maker of the future.

  • You sound like Lori...

  • she's my second favourite person on the planet.

  • all you need is a brevil.

  • ^ got to be bacon on the bottom

    LFGSS collective, what is your fav eating apple?

  • toffee

  • stewed.

    < wooden teeth.

  • Russet, by a country mile.

  • ^ This. End of list.

  • How do you do your hams?

    My butcher has offered me an 8kg bone-in ham as a thank you. I haven't seen it yet but assume this is basically a whole leg - how does one cook such a thing (in a christmassy sense). I've done many 2/3/4kg hams but can't imagine I have a pot big enough for an 8kg leg. Is the simmer essential for peak hamminess or can I chuck it in the oven?

  • brine in the bath over night then roast ?

  • Couple of large food grade plastic bags? Put bags in bath, chuck ham in, cover in brine, seal and leave overnight...

  • Depends on what he means by a ham.

    Leg of pork = uncured leg of pork
    Gammon = cured but not cooked leg of pork
    ham = cured and then boiled leg of pork that just needs to be finished with a glaze in the oven.

    But people tend to call gammons hams and hams gammons

  • ^This. you need to check.

    I'd wager a ham from the butcher is cured already, so no need for the brining stage.
    If it's raw, it'll need a soak overnight in cold water, fresh water simmer in a very big pan for quite a while, then oven.

  • Or... If it's a fresh leg of pork...

    Encase it in salt for a few weeks, wash off salt, pat dry and hang near your open hearth for a year...

    Ham! Galicia style... That's how my lot made it until very recently, no one keeps pigs anymore... It's a shame...

  • Thanks all. Definitely a cured but not cooked job. Guess I'll buy a bigger pan... I knew this day would come. Sniff.

    My dad has a fish kettle that's longer than my hob, that might do it.

  • Also, what kind of favours have you been doing for your butcher??!

  • Anyone cooked a shoulder of wild boar before? Looking for a good recipe.

  • I made a Porchetta with wild boar shoulder for our last Christmas dinner in London, it was very good but quite dry compared to pork... Much less fatty... I didn't brine it, probably should have in hindsight... Protect with lots of bacon and butter and cook low and covered?

  • Yup, low n' slow

  • Yeah - i've done a ton of pork shoulder in past, so figure temp wise the same but I'm more after flavour advice - what works well with wild boar? It is supposed to be fairly gamey, no?

  • Herbs, fungi, nuts, orchard fruits, etc...

  • Are you calling Oliver a boar? #inb4schick

  • Post a reply
    • Bold
    • Italics
    • Link
    • Image
    • List
    • Quote
    • code
    • Preview
About

Food

Posted by Avatar for StandardPractice @StandardPractice

Actions