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Cullen's Country Dr. Pepper 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.
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