Since there are only two of us in our household, when we bake a ham, there is a lot of leftover meat. Nancy doesn't like leftovers as a general rule, but she doesn't mind having leftover ham because we turn it into so many other very different dishes as we work to finish it.
The first thing she always asks for is a ham pot pie. I've never heard of anyone else making one of these, so maybe they are a creation that is unique to us. The process for making this pie is almost identical to what I do to make a chicken pot pie, which I have written about in this previous post. I make gravy out of the drippings from the bottom of the roaster, adding some heavy cream and mixed vegetables. Nancy cuts a few slices of ham into chunks, and everything goes into the meat pie pastry that I blogged in the other post. The only real difference other than the type of meat and the color of the gravy is that we like to cover the top of the meat filling with Swiss cheese before adding the top crust. Also, because of the salt that is already in the ham and the cheese, we add no additional seasoning to the gravy.
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The Swiss cheese (two different kinds) on top of the meat filling, waiting for the top crust to be added. |
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There is nothing quite like the feeling of taking a flaky meat pie out of the oven of a woodburning cookstove. Loaves of golden brown bread and meat pies just make a woodburning cookstove cook's heart sing. |
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The finished potpie removed from the oven to the countertop for serving. |
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Ham pot pie. Delectable!
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The next meal might be something really fast. One of the things I like is ham and sweet potatoes. In the picture below, I had just used a can of sweet potatoes, some pecan syrup leftover from sweet rolls, and a couple of slices of ham placed on top. I covered it and let it boil until all was hot. Some leftover green beans were warming in the small saucepan up next to the stovepipe.
Nancy's other usual request is ham and scalloped potatoes. For years, I would occasionally attempt homemade ham and scalloped potatoes with no good results. Then, a couple of years ago, I ran onto a video from Brenda Hall of the Youtube channel
Appalachian Cooking with Brenda. I now make scalloped potatoes and ham just the way she teaches in
this video.
If you've ever made scalloped potatoes, you know that they take a long time in the oven to get the potatoes cooked through. Brenda starts her potatoes on the stovetop to shave some of that oven time. This is a particularly efficient thing to do on a wood cookstove because while the oven is coming up to temperature, you can use the hot cooktop to get the meal jump started.
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The pot of homegrown potatoes beginning to cook in milk on top of the cookstove. The secret here (as Brenda continually reminds you in her video) is to keep them moving so they don't scorch. |
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You can see that this boiled over in the oven. This was the first time that I've had a really smoky boil-over in the oven of a wood cookstove. I shouldn't have filled the dish so full! After I saw what was happening, I added the foil and the pie tin to catch any further spills. |
After cutting the ham for the scalloped potatoes, there was not much meat left on the bone, so the hambone and its remains went into the soup kettle that was about half full of water. I brought it to a good quick boil while the scalloped potatoes were in the oven. Then, I let it simmer and reduce on the back of the range overnight. This resulted in about an inch or so of some intense ham broth that was perfect for ham and bean soup--the final dish that came out of this particular ham.
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The hambone boiling on the back of the range with the scalloped potatoes resting on the open door to the warming oven. |
Now, I don't know about the rest of the world, but in my particular area of Iowa, ham and bean soup is made with ham broth, Navy or Great Northern Beans, a paltry little bit of onion, carrot, and celery, and a whatever morsels of ham were left on the bone. I've made that soup before, and I'm told that mine was pretty good, but to me it tastes like dirty water. By that I mean that it has a distinct lack of flavor and doesn't do justice to the ham, the beans, or the vegetables.
You can see from the photo below, that my version of ham and bean soup is totally different. I used all of the traditional ingredients, but my beans came in the form of two cans of Van Camp's Pork and Beans, some ketchup, some potatoes (sometime I'm going to try adding pasta instead of the potatoes), and pearl barley. This, for me, is much more satisfying and delicious! Again, the ham and its broth along with the canned beans and ketchup are salty enough that I added no further seasoning of any kind.
Now, there is one other dish that we love to make with leftover ham, and that is ham balls. These are a favorite dish in the southern two tiers of counties in Iowa, but an "immigrant" from Mount Ayr brought these up to our area fifty years ago, and they remain a family favorite. They really deserve their own blog post, though, so you'll have to look for that in the future.
In these days of high food costs, I think a ham is money well spent because of the number of different meals that can be made from it--even the bone was a source of joy to our dog after we had picked it clean of the meat that we could use. Further, each of these dishes is extremely easy to make on a wood cookstove since no specific times and temperatures are needed for any of them.
Please use the comments section below to let me know what you do with leftover ham.
May your kitchen cookstove fire be burning brightly!
Jim,
ReplyDeleteWe are not nearly so imaginative about ham as you are. Perhaps that is partly due to neither of us being averse to leftovers. Another factor is our strict diets. Avoiding high-starch vegetables and grains limits our options.
That said (or written, as it were), your ham pot pie looks delicious. I have always liked pot pies of the other, more common, flavors. I should try to find a good keto-friendly pie crust recipe.
Our unimaginative ham sequence is really just ham, ham and eggs, then a ham bone for beans. My favorite bean combination is red speckled dixie butter beans and good mother Stallard beans. I like the flavor of butter beans, but they do not readily cook down to thicken the broth. I think good mother Stallard beans cook down a little more quickly than a lot of other beans, so they combine well with the butter beans. Further, I like the flavor of the good mother Stallard beans, too.
As always, thank you for this interesting post!