|
POTTED HAM
1 lb. lean cold boiled ham or tongue
1/4 lb. fat from ham, or 2 oz. butter
Mace or allspice (optional)
Clarified butter
Cut a pound of the lean of cold boiled ham or tongue, and pound it
in a mortar with a quarter of a pound of the fat, or with fresh
butter (in the proportion of about two ounces to a pound), till it
is a fine paste (some season it by degrees with a little pounded
mace or allspice); put it close down in pots for that purpose, and
cover it with clarified butter, a quarter of an inch thick; let it
stand one night in a cool place. Send it up in the pot, or cut in
thin slices.
From The Cook's Oracle by William Kitchiner, MD, New York, 1829
Comment: This is a form of preserved meat which over time evolved
into that well-known form of ham spelled with an "s" in front of its
name, mocked and derided by everyone from World War II soldiers to
British comedy troupes to recipients of unwanted commercial email.
We would be more explicit about this but do not want to arouse the
ire of the wonderful, forgiving folks in the legal department of
Hormel Foods.
All sorts of meats, seafoods and vegetables were preserved in potted
form. The common factors were the extremely fine mincing to which
the potted items were subjected, the tight packing of the resultant
paste, and the use of melted butter over the top to exclude air and
ensure, or at least encourage, preservation.
Return to Recipe Index
|