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Spiral Ham in the Slow Cooker

2.5

(2)

Cooked spiral ham with sides of vegetables on a silver serving platter.
Photo by Johnny Miller

It seems funny to me, after all these years of professional cooking, to buy something already cooked just to have to “cook” it again. When it comes to a spiral ham, this process is really more about imparting flavor than about cooking the ham (which comes already cooked). When it’s finished, the meat should be tender and almost falling off the bone, and you’ll have a great cooking liquid that can be sopped up with rice, tortillas, potatoes, bread…or egg noodles tossed with a little salt and sour cream. When the maple syrup and brown sugar, each with its own deep, sulfur-y, molasses-y flavor, combine with the cider vinegar and the mustards, they create a tangy liquid to serve with this ham. I like to think of it as a marinade that comes at the end instead of the beginning. Sign me up! I love to serve a bed of braised cabbage here, too.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    8–10 servings

Ingredients

1 (6- to 7-pound) bone-in, hickory-smoked, uncured fully cooked ham
5 medium parsnips, peeled and halved lengthwise
5 medium carrots, peeled and halved lengthwise
1 cup maple syrup
2 cups unsweetened apple juice
½ cup packed dark brown sugar
½ cup smooth Dijon mustard
½ cup grainy Dijon mustard
2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar
Kosher salt (if needed)

Preparation

  1. Cook the ham:

    Step 1

    Pour 3 cups of water into a 7-quart slow cooker. Add the ham, cut-side up, as well as the parsnips and carrots. Pour the maple syrup and apple juice over the ham, and sprinkle the brown sugar over the top. Cook on high, uncovered, for 30 to 45 minutes, then cover the slow cooker and cook on low until the ham is tender, 3 to 4 hours. Hams vary in size and tenderness, so be patient. When it’s tender, the meat should come off the bone with very little resistance. Taste a small piece for tenderness.

  2. Finish and serve:

    Step 2

    Transfer the ham and vegetables to a deep serving platter (reserve the liquid in the pot). Use a pair of kitchen shears or scissors to cut the slices of ham off the bone and let them fall onto the platter. Stir both kinds of mustard and the vinegar into the cooking liquid left in the slow cooker and taste for seasoning—the sauce may or may not need salt. Pour the liquid over the ham and vegetables, and serve.

Image may contain: Food, Dish, Meal, and Lunch
Excerpted from Cook With Me: 150 Recipes for the Home Cook Alex Guarnaschelli, copyright © 2020. Published by Clarkson Potter/Publishers, an imprint of Penguin Random House. Photography copyright: Johnny Miller © 2020 Buy the full book from Amazon

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