Boneless Ham a la Gourmet Magazine 1987.Here's the scene last Monday about 11:30 PM (that's 23:30 for my Continental friends, and a half hour more if you are in Hyderabad): I walk in with my haul from baking class, 2 rye loaves, 2
pains de campange, 12 mini baguettes.
Bonne Femme is sitting on the couch unable to sleep. "I have fresh bread, who wants a ham sandwich?"
BF replies, "I would but we don't have any mayonnaise."
"Huh? We got eggs don't we?"

One egg yolk, 1/2t mustard, a splash of vinegar, juice from half of a small lime, salt, white pepper and six ounces of canola oil. Thirty seconds later, Hey Presto, mayonnaise.

Midnight snack.
In school this quarter I am taking a food styling for photography class. Even though a friend who is a
noted photography expert remarked, "Take the Class? Hell man, you could teach it," I still need to learn the "Tricks of the trade." I mean how do they get a burger to look hot and juicy even though its no warmer than a jar of jam? How do they make a beer look cold and refreshing even though it's been several hours since it came out of a can? I don't know the answers yet, but I will find out over the next few weeks.
For the first project I decided to shoot ham, so I gotta make some ham. I started with the brine recipe for "Glazed Holiday Ham," from
Charcuterie, by Ruhlman and Polcyn. I threw in a handful old pickling spice and boiled it to a tea. Once this mixture had cooled I put in the ham. Since my boneless ham was in several pieces I figured it wouldn't need to sit too long, maybe three days.

Thoroughly pickled, time to tie our friends into roasts.


I let the roasts rest for a day then smoked them on the Weber Smokey Mountain.

Three hours later at an internal temperature of 155F, the ham is ready for its close-up.

This brings me to another philosophical quandary: Food as props. I'm sure somebody has written a book about this but I get an uneasy feeling about "styling" an object in order to made it look appetizing, then throw it away because it's inedible. This isn't a still life, this is portraiture. (all ham depicted in this blog was treated with respect, handled in accordance with sanitary guidelines and happily consumed). I know these thoughts verge on silly, along the lines of stepping on a bug, or the vegetarian having to cook meat at culinary class, I know there is give and take and compromises that are made for the greater good, but I haven't come to terms with it yet; I just can't put it down the drain.
In the mean time here are a couple of pictures of ham doing what it is supposed to do:

(Ham on a bagel under an egg and hollandaise)

(Ham on biscuit with egg)
Feeding someone, making someone happy.
Cheers.