Country Ham
- 1 country (dry cured) ham
- 1 liter Dr. Pepper
- 1 cup sweet pickle juice, optional
- Unwrap ham and scrub off any surface mold (if you hung in a sack for 6 months you'd have mold too).
- Carefully remove hock with hand saw.
- (If this idea makes you eye your first aid kit, ask your butcher to do it.
- But make sure you keep the hock, it's the best friend collard greens ever had.)
- Place ham in cooler and cover with clean water.
- (As long as it's not too dirty you can use what southerners call the "hose pipe").
- Stash the cooler in the bushes.
- If it's summer, throw in some ice.
- If it's freezing out, keep the cooler inside.
- Change the water twice a day for two days turning the ham each time.
- Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.
- Place ham in a large disposable turkey-roasting pan and add enough Dr. Pepper to come about halfway up the side of the ham.
- Add pickle juice if you've got it and tent completely with heavy-duty foil.
- Cook for 1/2 hour then reduce heat to 325 degrees F, and cook another 1 1/2 hours.
- Turn the ham over, insert an oven safe thermometer (probe-style is best) and cook another 1 1/2 hours, or until the deepest part of the ham hits 140 degrees F (approximately 15 to 20 minutes per pound total).
- Let rest 1/2 hour then slice paper-thin.
- Serve with biscuits or soft yeast rolls.
- Cooks note: Even after soaking, country ham is quite salty, so thin slicing is mandatory.
- If you're a bacon fan, however, cut a thicker (1/4-inch) slice and fry it up for breakfast.
country, dr pepper, sweet pickle juice
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/country-ham-recipe.html (may not work)