Types of Hams, Purchasing and Cooking
Times for Hams
Recipes for Ham
Hams: They can be fresh,
cook-before-eating, fully-cooked, picnic and country types. There are so
many kinds, and their storage times and cooking times can be quite
confusing. This background information serves to carve up the facts and make
them easier to understand.
Definition
The word HAM means pork which comes from the hind leg of a hog. Ham made
from the front leg of a hog will be labeled "pork shoulder picnic." "Turkey"
Ham must be made from the thigh meat of turkey.
Hams may be fresh, cured, or cured-and-smoked. The usual color for cured ham
is deep rose or pink; fresh ham (which is not cured) has the pale pink or
beige color of a fresh pork roast; country hams and prosciutto (which are
dry cured) range from pink to mahogany color.
Hams are either ready-to-eat or not. Ready-to-eat hams include prosciutto
and fully cooked hams; they can be eaten right out of the package. Fresh
hams and hams that are only trichina treated must be cooked by the consumer
before eating; these hams will bear the safe handling label.
Curing Solutions
Curing is the addition of salt, sodium nitrate (or saltpeter), nitrites and
sometimes sugars, seasonings, phosphates and ascorbates to pork for
preservation, color development and flavor enhancement.
Nitrate and nitrites contribute to the characteristic cured flavor and
reddish-pink color of cured pork. Nitrite and salt inhibit the outgrowth of
Clostridium botulinum, a deadly microorganism which can occur in foods.
The two most-used methods of adding solutions to pork are: injection into
muscle by needle; and tumbling or massaging into muscle to produce a more
tender product.
Dry Curing
In dry curing, the process used to make country hams and prosciutto, fresh
meat is rubbed with a dry-cure mixture of salt and other ingredients. Dry
curing produces a salty product. In 1992, FSIS approved a trichina treatment
method that permits substituting up to half of the sodium chloride with
potassium chloride to result in lower sodium levels. Since dry curing draws
out moisture, it reduces ham weight by at least 18% -- usually 20 to 25%;
this results in a more concentrated ham flavor.
Dry-cured hams may be aged from a few weeks to more than a year. Six months
is the traditional process but may be shortened according to aging
temperature.
These uncooked hams are safe stored at room temperature because they contain
so little water, bacteria can't multiply in them. Country hams may not be
injected with curing solutions or placed in curing solutions but they may be
smoked.
Wet Curing or Brine Cure
Brine curing is the most popular way of producing hams. It is a wet cure
whereby fresh meat is injected with a curing solution before cooking.
Brining ingredients can be salt, sugar, sodium nitrite, sodium nitrate,
sodium erythorbate, sodium phosphate, potassium chloride, water and
flavorings. Smoke flavoring (liquid smoke) may also be injected with brine
solution. Cooking may occur during this process.
Smoking & Smoke Flavoring
After curing, some hams are smoked. Smoking is a process by which ham is
hung in a smokehouse and allowed to absorb smoke from smoldering fires. This
gives added flavor and color to meat and slows the development of rancidity.
Foodborne Organisms
These organisms are associated with ham:
- Trichinella spiralis (trichina)
- worms sometimes present in hogs. All hams are specifically processed to
USDA guidelines to kill trichinae.
- Staphylococcus aureus (staph) -
is destroyed by cooking and processing but can be re-introduced via
mishandling; the bacteria can then produce a toxin which is not destroyed
by further cooking. Dry curing may or may not destroy S. aureus, but the
high salt content on the exterior inhibits these bacteria. When the ham is
sliced, the moister interior will permit staphylococcal multiplication;
thus sliced dry-cured hams must be refrigerated.
- Mold - can often be found on
country cured ham. We believe most of these are harmless but some molds
can produce mycotoxins. Molds grow on hams during the long curing and
drying process because the high salt and low temperatures do not inhibit
these robust organisms. DO NOT DISCARD the ham. Wash it with hot water and
scrub off the mold with a stiff vegetable brush.
Quantity to Buy
When buying a ham, estimate the size needed according to the number of
servings the type of ham should yield:
- 1/4 - 1/3 lb. per serving of
boneless ham
- 1/3 - 1/2 lb. of meat per
serving of ham with little bone
- 3/4 - 1 lb. of meat per serving
of ham with large bone.
Cooking or Reheating Hams
Both vacuum-packaged fully cooked and canned hams can be eaten cold just as
they come from their packaging. However, if you want to reheat these fully
cooked hams, set the oven no lower than 325°F and heat to an internal
temperature of 140°F as measured with a meat thermometer.
For fully cooked ham that has been repackaged in any other location outside
the plant or for leftover fully cooked ham, heat to 165°F.
Cook-before-eating hams must reach 160°F to be safely cooked before serving.
Cook in an oven set no lower than 325°F. Hams can also be safely cooked in a
microwave oven, other countertop appliances and on the stove top. Consult a
cookbook for specific methods and timing.
Country hams can be soaked 4 to 12 hours or longer in the refrigerator to
reduce the salt content before cooking. Then they can be cooked by boiling
or baking. Follow the manufacturer's cooking instructions.
HAM GLOSSARY
BUTT END, HALF OR PORTION - the upper, meatier part of the whole leg; a butt
portion has had some center slices removed for separate sale as ham steaks
or center cut ham slices. The half includes this meat.
CANNED HAM -- Canned hams come in two forms:
- Shelf stable - store on shelf
up to 2 years at room temperature. Generally not over 3 pounds in size.
Processed to kill all spoilage bacteria and pathogenic organisms such as
Clostridium botulinum, Salmonella and Trichinella spiralis. The product is
free of microorganisms capable of growing at ordinary room temperature.
However, high temperature storage -- above 122°F (50°C) -- may result in
harmless thermophylic bacteria multiplying and swelling or souring the
product.
- Refrigerated - may be stored in
refrigerator up to 6 to 9 months. Its weight can be up to 8% more than
original uncured weight due to uptake of water during curing. It need not
be labeled "Added water" except for "In Natural Juices." Net Weight is the
weight of the actual ham excluding the container. Processed at a
time/temperature sufficient to kill infectious organisms (including
Trichinae) but the ham is not sterilized so spoilage bacteria may grow
eventually.
CAPACOLLA - Boneless pork shoulder butts which are dry cured; not
necessarily cooked.
HAM CAPACOLLA is made with ham instead of pork shoulder butts.
COOK BEFORE EATING - needs further cooking. Is not completely cooked in the
plant and should be cooked to 160°F.
COTTAGE HAM - a ham made from the shoulder butt end.
COUNTRY HAM - uncooked, cured, dried, smoked-or-unsmoked meat products made
from a single piece of meat from the hind leg of a hog or from a single
piece of meat from a pork shoulder. Smithfield and country hams are not
fully cooked but are dry cured to be safe stored at room temperature. They
should be cooked before eating according to manufacturer's instructions. A
ham labeled "Smithfield Ham" must be processed in the city of Smithfield,
Virginia.
FRESH HAM - the uncured leg of pork. Since the meat is not cured or smoked,
it has the flavor of a fresh pork loin roast or pork chops. Its raw color is
pinkish red and after cooking, greyish white.
FULLY COOKED - needs no further cooking. Fully cooked in plant. Can be eaten
directly as it comes from its packaging or reheated.
GELATIN - about one-fourth ounce of dry gelatin is often added before a
canned ham is sealed to cushion the ham during shipment. During processing,
natural juices cook out of the ham and combine with the gelatin. When the
ham cools, a jell forms. Gelatin is included in the net weight statement on
the label.
HAM - the product is at least 20.5% protein in lean portion and contains no
added water.
HAM with NATURAL JUICES - the product is at least 18.5% protein. Can weigh
8% more than uncured weight. Example: canned hams.
HAM -- WATER ADDED - the product is at least 17.0% protein with 10% added
solution; it can weigh 8% more after curing than uncured.
HAM AND WATER PRODUCTS - Product may contain any amount of water but label
must indicate percent of "added ingredients." For example, "X % of weight is
added ingredients" for any canned ham with less than 17.0% protein.
HAM STEAK - another name for center cut ham slices.
HICKORY-SMOKED HAM - a cured ham which has been smoked by hanging over
burning hickory wood chips in a smokehouse. May not be labeled "hickory
smoked" unless hickory wood has been used.
HONEY-CURED - may be shown on the labeling of a cured product if honey is
the only sweetening ingredient or is at least half the sweetening
ingredients used, and if the honey is used in an amount sufficient to flavor
and/or affect the appearance of the finished product.
"LEAN" HAM - The term "lean" may be used on a ham's label provided the
product contains less than 10 grams fat, 4.5 grams or less of saturated fat,
and less than 95 milligrams cholesterol per 100 grams and Reference Amount
Customarily Consumed (RACC).
"EXTRA LEAN" HAM - A ham labeled "extra lean" must contain less than 5 grams
fat, less than 2 grams saturated fat and the same cholesterol as allowed per
the amount of "lean" ham.
PICNIC, PORK SHOULDER PICNIC - a front shoulder cut of pork which has been
cured in the same manner as ham.
PROSCIUTTO HAM - An Italian-style dry cured raw ham; not smoked; often
coated with pepper. Proscuitti can be eaten raw because of the way they are
processed. PARMA HAM is prosciutto from the Parma locale in Italy. These
hams tend to be larger than the U.S. produced product, as Italian hogs are
larger at slaughter.
SECTIONED AND FORMED or CHUNKED AND FORMED - a boneless ham that is made
from different cuts, tumbled or massaged and reassembled into a casing or
mold and fully cooked. During this process it is usually thoroughly
defatted.
SHANK END, HALF OR PORTION - the lower, slightly pointed part of the leg. A
"portion" has the center slices removed for separate sale as "ham steaks" or
center cut ham slices. The half includes this meat.
SKINLESS, SHANKLESS - A ham with all of the skin and the shank removed. The
leg bone and aitch (hip) bone remain.
SUGAR CURED - a term that may appear on ham labels if cane or beet sugar is
at least half the sweetening ingredients used and if the sugar is used in an
amount sufficient to flavor and/or affect the appearance of the finished
product. Most hams contain sugar in the curing mixture.
WESTPHALIAN HAM - A German-style dry cured ham that is similar to Prosciutto;
smoked, sometimes with juniper berries. Also called Westfalischer Schinken.
HAM STORAGE CHART
NOTE: Freezer storage is for quality only. Frozen hams remain safe
indefinitely.
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