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Prepare the ham. 1. Preheat your oven to 325 degrees Fahrenheit. 2. Place the ham cut-side down in a roasting pan. Bake the ham. 3. Insert cloves into the ham, spacing them 1 inch apart.
Ham salad is a traditional Anglo-American salad. Ham salad resembles chicken salad, egg salad, and tuna salad (as well as starch-based salads, like potato salad, macaroni salad, and pea salad): the primary ingredient, ham, is mixed with smaller amounts of chopped vegetables or relishes, and the whole is bound with liberal amounts of a mayonnaise, [1] salad cream, or other similar style of ...
Ham salad: Meat salad Includes ham, mayonnaise or salad dressing, diced dill or sweet pickles or pickle relish, chopped hard boiled egg, and perhaps onions, celery, cucumber or tomatoes. Herring salad: Sweden: Fish salad Made of cut and salted herring with beetroot, onion and potato. Insalata Caprese: Campania, Italy: Tomato and cheese salad
Ham salad – Anglo-American dish [7] Ham sandwich – Common type of sandwich; Hawaiian pizza – Pizza variety usually topped with pineapple and ham; Jambon – a ham and cheese pastry popular in Ireland. [8] Jambon-beurre – a very popular French ham sandwich made of a baguette sliced open, spread with butter, and filled with slices of ham. [9]
Westphalian Ham: a German-style cured ham that comes from pigs who are fed a diet of acorns from the Westphalia forest. The dark brown ham is smoked over beechwood and juniper wood.
While fresh, raw ham must be cooked within five days of purchase, unopened lunch meat can last in the refrigerator for up to two weeks (or the “use by” date).
Cheong (Korean: 청; Hanja: 淸) is a name for various sweetened foods in the form of syrups, marmalades, and fruit preserves. In Korean cuisine, cheong is used as a tea base, as a honey-or-sugar-substitute in cooking, as a condiment, and also as an alternative medicine to treat the common cold and other minor illnesses. [1] [2] [3]
A popular snack, bindaetteok (mung bean pancake), is made with ground nokdu and fresh sukju namul. Starch extracted from ground nokdu is used to make transparent dangmyeon ( cellophane noodles). The dangmyeons are the main ingredients for japchae (a salad-like dish) and sundae (a blood sausage), and are a subsidiary ingredient for soups and ...