dedmiston wrote:
The “proper breakfast fry-up” that my English friends have served me is a confusing fare, but I don’t fault them for it.
My roots are kind of all over the place, but I love my traditions. For many years we hosted the “Sausage Fest” at our place when I would hand stuff eighty pounds of wursts and grill them for our guests.
We also love our Mexican food here. Tomorrow I’m combining our traditions and I’m smoking a ham for “pulled ham” (not the same as pulled pork) and we’re having pulled ham tacos. I’ve already set my alarm so I can get up early to start the fire and launch the ham.
Interesting word, "ham."
Dedmiston, is this a raw "ham" (rear leg of the pig) or a cured ham?
Many years ago I ordered a raw ham from Sysco and got a Virginia Cure 81 ham from Hormel. I sent it back, clarifying what I want. They sent the SAME ham to me the next day. I sent it back again and called my salesman. "Hams are always cured and smoked," he said. "Nope" was my response and I described it to him: the rear leg from the hip joint to the knee (hock). He told me Sysco (the world's largest food distributor) didn't carry anything like that. I went to a local butcher and got exactly what I needed.
I'd love to hear more about your process. Do you brine the leg? Cook it bone-in? Have a favorite wood for smoking?
Pics of tacos. :-)