Baked Ham with Pineapple and Mustard Glaze
Baked ham was the traditional Christmas dinner long before turkey came along- try this recipe with a beautiful pineapple and mustard glaze.

Related Stories
From Like Grandma Used to Make
Long before turkey became a Christmas dinner institution, there was baked ham. The ham can be prepared for glazing the day before, then covered and refrigerated.
Preparation time about 1 hour
Cooking time 3/4–13/4 hours
Serves 20–25 (using a 7 kg ham)
Ingredients
For the ham
1 ham, cooked on the bone
Cloves
Aluminium foil
For the glaze
1 cup runny honey
1/4 cup pineapple juice
1 cup soft brown sugar
2 teaspoons Dijon mustard
Cooking Method
1 Buy a pre-cooked ham on the bone. Allow plenty of time for the preparation – it is not difficult but it is a little messy. Strip off the brown skin, trying not to disturb the layer of creamy fat beneath it. Score the surface of the fat into small diamonds and stud each diamond with a clove.
2 Line a large roasting pan with a double thickness of aluminium foil, bringing the foil over the edges of the pan. (This will catch drips of glaze falling off the ham and prevent flare-ups. It also means a clean roasting pan at the end of cooking time.) Put the ham in the pan, making sure the foil stays upright.
3 Preheat the oven to 225°C. Mix the glaze ingredients together, pour over the ham and put it in the oven. If you are glazing for appearance only, it will take about 45 minutes.
4 As parts of the fat take on enough colour, a rich golden brown with slightly charred edges, place small pieces of foil on top to deflect the heat. If you want to serve the ham hot, allow an hour longer for it to heat through (about 11/2–13/4 hours in total), but lower the heat to 200°C after 1 hour. (You may need to protect the entire surface of the ham with foil after 50–60 minutes. The ham should be basted with the glaze every 20 minutes or so.)
5 Serve the ham hot or at room temperature. Use a long, thin-bladed knife to slice it. Cut the first slice vertically, down to the bone, in the centre of the leg, then slice at a slight angle on either side of this cut. This gives every slice of ham (until you get closer to the bone) a rim of glaze-encrusted fat.
Savour over 200
traditional recipes
– the kind that are
handed down from
generation to
generation.
|
| ||||||
Post A Comment
| Name* | |
| Email* | |
| Comment* | |

Fun Poll
Stir-fry Recipes
Stir-fry Recipes
Have You Seen...
![]() Life Well Shared | ![]() Embrace Life | ![]() Embrace Life | ![]() Food & Recipes | ![]() Embrace Life | ![]() Entertainment |
Share it.jpg)

.gif)





.jpg)



















