Glazed mulled wine ham | Jamie Oliver recipes (2024)

  • Healthy recipes
    • Healthy snacks
    • Healthy lunches
    • Healthy chicken recipes
    • Healthy fish recipes
    • Healthy vegetarian recipes
  • Main Ingredient
    • Chicken
    • Pasta
    • Vegetables
    • Fish
    • Beef
    • Eggs
    • View more…
  • Special Diets
    • Vegan
    • Vegetarian ideas
    • Gluten-free
    • Dairy-free
    • Budget recipes
    • One-pan recipes
    • Meals for one
    • Breakfast
    • Desserts
    • Quick fixes
    • View more…
  • Baking recipes
    • Cakes
    • Biscuit recipes
    • Gluten-free bakes
    • View more…
  • Family recipes
    • Money saving recipes
    • Cooking with kids
    • School night suppers
    • Batch cooking
    • View more…
  • Special occasions
    • Dinner party recipes
    • Sunday roast recipes
    • Dinner recipes for two
    • View more…
    • 5 Ingredients Mediterranean
    • ONE
    • Jamie’s Keep Cooking Family Favourites
    • 7 Ways
    • Veg
    • View more…
  • Nutrition
    • What foods are good for gut health?
    • Healthy eating tips
    • Special diets guidance
    • All about sugar
    • Learn about portion size
    • View more
  • Features
    • Cheap eats
    • Healthy meals
    • Air-fryer recipes
    • Family cooking
    • Quick fixes
    • View more
  • How to’s
    • How to cook with frozen veg
    • How to make the most of your oven
    • How to make meals veggie or vegan
    • View more
  • More Jamie Oliver

Mulled wine glazed ham

Sticky orange marmalade, sweet pineapple & festive spices

Glazed mulled wine ham | Jamie Oliver recipes (2)

Sticky orange marmalade, sweet pineapple & festive spices

“Beautifully finished with a sticky mulled wine-inspired glaze, this is Christmas ham at its finest. Fragrant and full of flavour, it makes the perfect festive centrepiece. Plus, it’ll give you a stash of beyond-delicious leftovers. ”

Serves 14 with lots of leftovers

Cooks In2 hours 40 minutes

DifficultyNot too tricky

Christmas

Nutrition per serving
  • Calories 290 15%

  • Fat 11.6g 17%

  • Saturates 3.8g 19%

  • Sugars 20.2g 22%

  • Salt 3.3g 55%

  • Protein 25.4g 51%

  • Carbs 20.2g 8%

  • Fibre 0.2g -

Of an adult's reference intake

Glazed mulled wine ham | Jamie Oliver recipes (3)

Recipe From

Jamie: Keep Cooking at Christmas

By Jamie Oliver

Tap For Method

Ingredients

  • 1 x 2.5 kg (approx) higher-welfare unsmoked middle-cut gammon , with knuckle
  • a few sprigs of woody herbs , such as rosemary, thyme
  • 3 fresh bay leaves
  • 2 sticks of celery
  • 2 carrots
  • 1 onion
  • 2 cloves of garlic
  • ½ a fresh red chilli
  • 1 tablespoon whole black peppercorns
  • olive oil
  • GLAZE
  • 1 x 454 g jar of orange marmalade , (no-peel)
  • 175 ml full-bodied red wine , such as Rioja
  • 1 star anise
  • a few cloves , plus extra for the pineapple
  • ½ a stick of cinnamon , or 1 pinch of ground cinnamon
  • 1 fresh bay leaf
  • 1 clementine
  • 1 x 435 g tin of pineapple rings in juice

Tap For Method

The cost per serving below is generated by Whisk.com and is based on costs in individual supermarkets. For more information about how we calculate costs per serving read our FAQS

Glazed mulled wine ham | Jamie Oliver recipes (4)

Recipe From

Jamie: Keep Cooking at Christmas

By Jamie Oliver

Tap For Ingredients

Method

  1. Take your meat out of the fridge and bring it up to room temperature before you cook it.
  2. Place the gammon in your largest pot, then strip in the woody herbs and add the bay. Roughly chop the celery and carrots, peel and quarter the onion, and squash the garlic cloves, then add it all to the pot with the chilli and peppercorns.
  3. Cover with water, bring to the boil, then pop the lid on and simmer gently for 2 hours, or until the meat is tender, turning it halfway, topping up with water occasionally and skimming away any excess fat.
  4. Preheat the oven to 180°C/350°F/gas 4. Transfer the gammon to a large roasting tray (save a little of the stock for later), then carefully remove the skin and discard, keeping the fat on the meat. Score the fat in a criss-cross fashion, then drizzle with 1 tablespoon of oil. Roast the gammon for 20 to 30 minutes, or until lightly golden.
  5. To make the glaze, spoon the marmalade into a non-stick frying pan on a medium heat, pour in the red wine and bring to a simmer, stirring occasionally.
  6. Add the spices and bay, strip in the clementine zest using a speed-peeler, then pour in the pineapple juice, saving the fruit for later. Allow to bubble away and reduce by half, then switch off – it should be thick and syrupy.
  7. When the roasting time’s up, take the tray out of the oven, then arrange pineapple rings over the gammon, securing them with a few cloves. Arrange the rest of the pineapple in and around the tray, then pour the glaze over the meat.
  8. Spoon ½ a ladleful of the gammon stock into the pan you used to make the glaze, scrape up all the sticky bits from the bottom and pour into the tray, ensuring all the gammon and pineapple is coated. Roast for a further 20 minutes, or until beautifully glazed, basting with the glaze every 5 minutes.
  9. Remove the glazed ham to a serving platter, ready to slice hot, cold or at room temperature. Pour any remaining glaze from the tray all over the ham, and arrange the pineapple slices around it.

Tips

After cooking, allow the ham to cool before covering tightly with tin foil and storing in the fridge – it will keep happily for up to three days.

If you’re giving this as a gift, it’s best to cook it on the day you want to give it – this will give the lucky recipient the maximum time to enjoy it. Once cooked and cooled, keep it well covered and chilled in the fridge at all times (don’t be tempted to pop it under the tree!) and make sure you pass on the same instructions.

BUDGET-FRIENDLY SWAPS:
If you’re after a more cost-friendly recipe, simply ditch the pineapple and swap the gammon for 3 x 1.3kg unsmoked ham hocks. Follow the recipe up to step 3, then simmer gently for just 1 hour 30 minutes, and continue with the rest of the recipe above. When you reach step 9, use a couple of forks to shred the ham off the bone, discarding the bones and any wobbly bits of fat, then transfer to a serving platter and pour over any remaining glaze. You’ll end up with something really special, without breaking the bank.

Related recipe

Baked cheese

Related features

Christmas Day recipes for Australia

How to make a seasonal celebration cake

Stir-up Sunday: perfect Christmas pudding recipes

Glazed mulled wine ham | Jamie Oliver recipes (9)

Recipe From

Jamie: Keep Cooking at Christmas

By Jamie Oliver

© 2024 Jamie Oliver Enterprises Limited

© 2024 Jamie Oliver Enterprises Limited

Glazed mulled wine ham | Jamie Oliver recipes (2024)

FAQs

How and when to glaze a ham? ›

The glaze should not be applied until the final hour to 30 minutes, in order to avoid burning the sugars. What you're going to do with the glaze ingredients is just combine most of them into a paste, and then apply it to the ham. After that, the heat in your oven will take care of everything.

What is honeybaked ham glaze made of? ›

Heat the honey, corn syrup, and butter in a double boiler to make the glaze. Brush the glaze over the ham and bake in a foil-lined pan for about 1 hour and 15 minutes, brushing every 15 minutes or so with the glaze. Broil the ham for a few minutes before removing it from the oven.

What to serve with gammon jamie oliver? ›

Christmas ham & eggs: Jamie Oliver & Nanny Betty

British gammon rubbed with mustard and pan fried til golden and juicy. Served with an apple and watercress salad, mini baked potatoes and scattered with crisp sprigs of rosemary this is the perfect quick and easy lunchtime recipe.

Do you glaze a ham covered or uncovered? ›

4After about 2 hours of baking time, remove the foil and brush the glaze on the ham in 20 minutes intervals (put the ham back in the oven, uncovered, in between) until it's nice and glossy. Remove from the oven and allow to rest 15 to 20 minutes before carving.

How do you get glaze to stick to ham? ›

Basting – As the brown sugar ham glaze cools, it thickens so it sticks better to the ham as you baste during the cook time. 7. Internal temp – Ham is already cooked and ready for eating, so glazed hams are really about extra flavour + glazing.

Can I glaze a precooked ham? ›

Hams are sold fully cooked and fully sliced, all the heavy lifting has already been done so all we have to do is smother it in Brown Sugar Glaze and warm it up!

Can you overcook a glazed ham? ›

Can you overcook a glazed ham? Yes, you can. Overcooked ham can become dry. Cook the ham for 1 hour at 200ºC or until warmed through, basting it every 15 minutes.

How do you use the glaze packet that comes with the ham? ›

Whether you heat your spiral ham in the slow cooker or oven, all you have to do is open the glaze packet and apply it 30 minutes before your ham is finished cooking. By the time it's ready to serve, you'll have a satiny-glazed ham without any of the time or effort it takes to make a ham glaze.

What can you use instead of honey in ham glaze? ›

Best honey substitutes
  1. Raw sugar. Raw sugar doesn't go through the same bleaching process as refined white sugar. ...
  2. Brown sugar. Most brown sugar is just a mixture of white sugar and molasses. ...
  3. Maple syrup. Maple syrup comes from (surprise, surprise) maple trees. ...
  4. Molasses. ...
  5. Agave syrup. ...
  6. Corn syrup. ...
  7. Barley malt syrup. ...
  8. Date paste.
Jan 28, 2022

Why does Honey Baked Ham taste so good? ›

First, our Honey Baked Ham products start with a rigorous selection process, then the meat is smoked for up to 24 hours with our special blend of hardwood chips. The result is that every rich and flavorful bite, and every slice, is fall-apart-in-your-mouth perfect. There's something about that sweet, crunchy glaze.

Why not heat Honey Baked Ham? ›

We recommend that you do not heat Honey Baked Hams® - they are made to enjoy right from the refrigerator. If you prefer your meat warmed, gently heat on low heat 275°F for 10 min per pound only by the slice, do not heat the entire ham. Heating may cause the meat to dry out and lose flavor.

What's the difference between ham and gammon? ›

Both of these delicious and versatile cuts are taken from the pig's hind legs. Gammon is meat that has been cured (by being salted, brined or smoked) and sold raw, whereas Ham is meat that has been dry-cured or cooked, and is sold ready to eat. In a nutshell; when you've cooked your Gammon, it becomes Ham.

How does Gordon Ramsay cook gammon? ›

Put the gammon into a large saucepan and pour on enough cold water to cover. Add the carrots, leek, onion, peppercorns, coriander seeds, cinnamon stick and bay leaves. Bring to the boil, turn down to a simmer and cook for 3 hours, topping up with more boiling water if necessary.

How many days before Christmas can you glaze a ham? ›

To Prepare Ahead: make the glaze up to 2 weeks in advance. Remove the rind from the ham and score it, return to the fridge up to 2 days ahead. On the day of, apply the glaze, bake and baste.

How do you heat and glaze a fully cooked ham? ›

Add water to the bottom of the pan and cover the whole thing tightly with foil. Bake at 325F for 16-20 minutes per pound, until a meat thermometer registers 135F. Unwrap the ham and apply the glaze; increase the heat to 400F and bake for 15-20 minutes longer until the glaze is burnished.

Can you glaze a cold cooked ham? ›

If glazing a pre-cooked ham it will need to be served cold, but still makes a great ham for carving. Using a small knife, remove the skin from the ham, leaving about 1cm of fat. Score the fat in a diamond pattern and it's ready to glaze.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Roderick King

Last Updated:

Views: 6136

Rating: 4 / 5 (71 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Roderick King

Birthday: 1997-10-09

Address: 3782 Madge Knoll, East Dudley, MA 63913

Phone: +2521695290067

Job: Customer Sales Coordinator

Hobby: Gunsmithing, Embroidery, Parkour, Kitesurfing, Rock climbing, Sand art, Beekeeping

Introduction: My name is Roderick King, I am a cute, splendid, excited, perfect, gentle, funny, vivacious person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.