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  2. How Long Does It Take To Cook a Ham? Everything You ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/long-does-cook-ham...

    HOW LONG TO COOK SMOKED HAM, cook-before-eating. Whole, bone in. 10 to 14. 18 to 20. 145° and allow to rest for at least 3 minutes. Half, bone in. 5 to 7. 22 to 25. Shank or Butt Portion, bone in ...

  3. Smoked meat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoked_meat

    Traditionally the haddock is smoked with green wood and peat. [31] [32] Smoked finnan haddie is the colour of straw, newer commercial methods of drying without smoke produce a gold or yellow colour. [31] [32] Until the 1800s when regular rail service was established, finnan haddie remained a local dish, now it can be found in markets worldwide ...

  4. Smoking (cooking) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoking_(cooking)

    The smoking of food likely dates back to the paleolithic era. [7] [8] As simple dwellings lacked chimneys, these structures would probably have become very smoky.It is supposed that early humans would hang meat up to dry and out of the way of pests, thus accidentally becoming aware that meat that was stored in smoky areas acquired a different flavor, and was better preserved than meat that ...

  5. The Honey Baked Ham Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Honey_Baked_Ham_Company

    In 1924, Harry Hoenselaar created a bone-in spiral-slicer that smoked and cooked a ham. [2] He said the idea for the spiral ham slicer "came to him in a dream". Hoenselaar built his prototype spiral slicer using "a tire jack, a pie tin, a washing machine motor, and a knife". [3] In the 1930s, Hoenselaar sold honey-glazed hams to drugstores in ...

  6. Pork roll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pork_roll

    Food preservation techniques, such as salting and smoking meat, have been practiced for millennia. Evidence of traditional ham and sausage production dates back more than 2,000 years. An item resembling pork roll, packed minced ham, may have been locally produced in the later 1700s. [9]

  7. Prague ham - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prague_Ham

    Prague Ham on a stall at the Old Town Square in Prague. Prague Ham (Czech: Pražská šunka, German: Prager Schinken) is a type of brine-cured, stewed, and mildly beechwood-smoked boneless ham [1] [2] originally from Prague in Bohemia (Czech Republic). When cooked on the bone, it is called šunka od kosti ("ham from the bone"), considered a ...

  8. Smithfield ham - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smithfield_ham

    The first record of the commercial sale of cured "Smithfield Ham" is a receipt to Ellerston and John Perot on the Dutch Caribbean Island of St Eustatius, dating from 1779. [1] The Isle of Wight County Museum holds P.D. Gwaltney Jr.'s "pet ham". It is thought to be the world's oldest ham, having been cured in 1902.

  9. Charbroiler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charbroiler

    Hamburgers cooking on a charbroiler. A charbroiler (also referred to as a chargrill, char-broiler or simply broiler) is a commonly used cooking device consisting of a series of grates or ribs that can be heated using a variety of means, and is used in both residential and commercial applications for an assortment of cooking operations. The heat ...