Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Elizabethan Pork

Elaine Koogler ekoogler011 at home.com
Tue Feb 12 06:59:42 PST 2002


Except for the cider (which sounds yummy!!), it is the exact recipe that my
mother used to bake hams!  Even down to the diamond scoring and the cloves.
She learned how to do this from my grandmother who was a farm housewife in
the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia.  Many of these recipes from this area
have been passed down through the generations.  The people here mostly are
of Scottish and Germanic stock.

Kiri

-----Original Message-----
From: sca-cooks-admin at ansteorra.org [mailto:sca-cooks-admin at ansteorra.org]On
Behalf Of Susan Laing
Sent: Monday, February 11, 2002 9:58 PM
To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org
Subject: RE: Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Elizabethan Pork

Kiri - same problem this side of the world

One of the local favourites is "Celtic Ham" aka "Gammon in cider with orange
sauce" (the below recipe has been reduced from the long version which
includes leaving the salted hams in water overnight - our local smoked hams
aren't that salty and don't need the extra step)

I'd like to track down a period recipe that shows a similar style of recipe
so I can tell people that "this is NOT a period recipe but is very simliar
to recipe X - found in this manuscript" (fingers crossed).

Johanna has kindly sent me some Ham information that I need to recheck -
will send on anything that I manage to find :-)

mari

Celtic Ham

1 x Shoulder or Leg of Ham
Cider (Draught) - 1 large bottle
Glaze :
Brown Sugar - 4 tablespoons
Mustard (powered) - 1 teaspoon
Cloves - small packet (to stud ham with)
Orange - (grated rind & juice of 1)

Preheat oven to 180 C / 350 F
* Remove skin and score fat in diamond pattern with sharp knife and place in
a large cooking tray
* Mix together glaze ingredients
* Spread glaze over leg and stud centre of each diamond pattern with a clove
*Pour cider around base of ham

Place in an oven for approx 1 hour - basting occasionally with cider until
glaze is crisp & golden

>One of the first dishes I was introduced to in the SCA (back when >rocks
>were soft and dirt was new) was something called "Norman Vinegar >Roast".
>Basically it consisted of taking a cured ham, studding it with >cloves and
>basting it with a mixture of honey and vinegar.  It was >passed on to me by
>some very fine cooks in the Barony of Caer Mear in >Atlantia.  I have often
>wondered where the recipe came from and if it >really was a period recipe
>or something that those cooks dreamed up as >a period-seeming thing.  Any
>ideas?
>
>Kiri


_________________________________________________________________
Send and receive Hotmail on your mobile device: http://mobile.msn.com

_______________________________________________
Sca-cooks mailing list
Sca-cooks at ansteorra.org
http://www.ansteorra.org/mailman/listinfo/sca-cooks




More information about the Sca-cooks mailing list