Skip to main content

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.

Read More
A pinch of sugar in the spice rub ensures picture-perfect grill marks with layers of flavor.
This sauce is slightly magical. The texture cloaks pasta much like a traditional meat sauce does, and the flavors are deep and rich, but it’s actually vegan!
Developed in the 1980s by a chef in Hong Kong, this sauce is all about umami.
This summery sheet-pan dinner celebrates the bounty of the season and couldn't be simpler to make. Chorizo plays nicely with the salad, thanks to its spice.
Rather than breaded and fried as you might expect croquettes to be, these are something more akin to a seared chicken salad patty.
A little shrimp paste goes a long, long, long way in this delicious vegetable dish.
An espresso-and-cumin-spiked rub (or brine) gives this smoked chicken impressive flavor.
This version of pork skewers is made in the oven, which tastes just as good, but you could always throw these on the grill for a version closer to the original.