Monday, March 26, 2018

2018 Easter Ham Dinner

Cooking a holiday dinner can be intimidating. However if you plan it out and write up a time line things will go smoothly and the results will be impressive. Read the recipes below all the way through. After them slave will provide a simple time line for cooking to make this a breeze.


Here is a simple Easter dinner. A fantastic southern style ham, a definitive potato gratin, and some green beans. Basic yet extraordinary.

Ham



Ingredients:
½ cup chicken broth
½ cup creamy peanut butter
½ cup brown sugar
1 clove garlic, chopped
2 teaspoons soy sauce

Directions:

Preheat oven to 300°F. 
 

Cut open the plastic around the ham and cut the string off. Best to do it now and not try once it has a sticky crust baked on to it. 
 


Place ham on a big sheet of foil in a roasting dish, bring up the sides. Add ½ cup of chicken broth and seal the foil. Bake 1 hour, until heated through.


In a small saucepan, combine brown sugar, peanut butter, garlic, soy sauce and ½ cup broth, and bring to a simmer until melted and smooth, then remove from heat.


Raise oven to 400°F. Remove foil from ham, pour on glaze, and return to oven uncovered for about 20 minutes or until glaze is caramelized. Let rest 30 minutes before serving.


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Simple Green beans:

Ingredients:
1 package frozen green beans
½ Cup chopped onion
½ Cup beef broth


Directions:
Mix the onion with the beans and pour on the broth. Cook according to package directions in microwave.

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Zen of Potato Gratin

Ingredients:
1 C heavy cream
2 C whole milk
2 medium garlic cloves, smashed
½ cup chopped onion
1/8 tsp nutmeg
6 springs fresh thyme
2 tsp black peppercorns
1 ½ tsp. salt
3 large russet potatoes
2 oz. Parmigiano-reggiano cheese
4 oz grated Gruyere cheese*
1 Tbs butter softened
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*Gruyere cheese has a wonderful complexity of flavors – at first fruity then becomes more earthy and nutty. Ask for it!


Directions:


In small saucepan, combine cream, milk, garlic, onion, nutmeg, thyme, peppercorns and salt. Bring to boil, remove from heat, cover and steep for 1 hour.
Pre-heat oven to 300 degrees.
Peel the potatoes and cover with damp paper towel.



Return to dairy mix to boil and strain into a large heatproof bowl, pressing gently on solids.

Using a mandolin, slice potatoes 1/8 inch thick directly into the hot mix. Stir gently to fully coat each slice.


In small bowl combine cheeses.
Spray a 2-quart baking dish. Lay slices in an even layer on bottom, then sprinkle with cheese mixture.
Repeat layering until all potatoes are used and half cheese mix remains: leave the top layer without cheese. Pour any remaining milk mixture over the potatoes.


Bake until tender and the surface is lightly golden brown,
about 1½ hours.
(after 30 minutes put the ham in)
Then top with remaining cheese, Raise heat to 400 continue to bake for 20 minutes or until evenly browned on top.

Allow the gratin to rest 30 minutes before serving!
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As gratin bakes, two actions produce the creamy filling.
First, potatoes release some of their starches, which thicken the surrounding liquid.
Second, the dairy reduces – some of its liquid is absorbed by potato while rest slowly evaporates. As the liquid in the dairy is reduced, protein and fat are left behind, forming creamy curds throughout.
This 2 to 1 ration is important. Too much cream breaks during the cooking, coating the potato slices in a slick of fat and masking their flavor.
Too much milk gives you a dry potato dish filled with crumbly curds. Results are about the same using evaporated milk or with fresh, so take you pick.

The challenge is to create layers of flavor so we steep the milk first. This infuses the gratin with layers of complex aromatics. Yes you do appear to over salt the milk but this is necessary to season the potatoes. When mixed into the milk this makes the seasoning uniform throughout.

Here we use a high starch russet potato. These are low in moisture and best absorb the flavorful dairy. This is important because as they cook, they release plenty of starch, which helps thicken up the dish.

These potatoes quickly oxidize becoming brown and discolored. Cover them with a damp paper towel as you peel instead of dumping into a bowl of water. That would wash off some of the starches you want! Instead slice them directly into the warm milk. This prevents the discoloration and keeps the starches where you want them! By added to the heated mixture it reduces the amount of baking time necessary.

Some old cookbooks recommend the addition of egg or egg yolk. Even the smallest amount with result in a subtle texture of a flan. This makes it easy to slice but does not give the soft creaminess.

The Cheese Question:
Some say there is no place for added cheese in a gratin. It should make its own creamy curds. However this dish uses cheese to brighten and the gruyere puts a bit of nuttiness into play. The cheese forms a crunchy – chewy crust that gives it the name of gratin.

The two temperature cooking gives the best results. Starting at 300 degrees gently reduces the milk and cream, while the potatoes become tender.
Then adding more cheese on top and broiling gives a nice chewy crust.

Your timeline:


Always start out with your cutting. Use small bowls and get this done first. The exception is the potatoes. Don't cut them until they are needed.

First step is to prepare the potatoes for they take the longest.

After they are in the oven, start putting together the ham. It goes in 30 minutes after the potatoes did.
When you reach the 1.5 hour mark on potatoes, the ham will be at the 1 hour mark.
Make your glaze because now is the time to add that to the ham as you raise the oven temperature to 400 degrees.

The green beans take hardly any time at all so you can start them AFTER the ham and potatoes are out of the oven and resting.

If you want hot rolls to go with the meal, they can be put in the oven when you remove the ham and potatoes.

This way the elements finish together.
The long baking times give the opportunity to set the table and prepare any Easter decorations you might wish.
Put out the deviled eggs






So excited to be serving my Master Indy!
socialslave

To satisfy and restore.
To nourish, support and maintain.
To gratify, spoil, comfort and please,
to nurture, assist, and sustain
..I cook!

Please buy slave's cookbook:

The Little Black Book of Indiscreet Recipes 
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