Christmas Mains | RecipeTin Eats https://www.recipetineats.com/category/christmas_recipes/christmas-mains/ Fast Prep, Big Flavours Fri, 08 Dec 2023 08:40:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.3 https://www.recipetineats.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/cropped-favicon@2x.png?w=32 Christmas Mains | RecipeTin Eats https://www.recipetineats.com/category/christmas_recipes/christmas-mains/ 32 32 171556125 What we put on our seafood platter https://www.recipetineats.com/seafood-platter/ https://www.recipetineats.com/seafood-platter/#comments Fri, 08 Dec 2023 05:00:00 +0000 https://www.recipetineats.com/?p=126740 RecipeTin Seafood platterHere’s what we put on our seafood platter, a staple on Christmas Day for the RecipeTin Family! Our top tips for what to get, where best to spend your money and where not to, and our favourite seafood sauces. Plus, a video at the Sydney Fish Markets – watch me choose the seafood! A lifetime... Get the Recipe

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Here’s what we put on our seafood platter, a staple on Christmas Day for the RecipeTin Family! Our top tips for what to get, where best to spend your money and where not to, and our favourite seafood sauces. Plus, a video at the Sydney Fish Markets – watch me choose the seafood!

A lifetime of eating seafood!

In today’s recipe, I’m sharing all the items we put on our seafood platter – a staple on Christmas Day! We love the ease (mostly no-cook, just assembling) and because it’s a treat reserved for special occasions. Australian seafood is incredible, but good quality seafood is not cheap!

This is why we are pretty meticulous with research and taste-testing our seafood – we even write nerdy notes to ourselves as reminders, to refine our purchases for the next shop. Because there’s nothing more disappointing than spending hard-earned money on expensive crab only to find it tastes completely bland.

So this post today is essentially our shopping list of what we include on our seafood platter. Learn from all the tips we have picked up over a lifetime of seafood eating, and watch me buy the seafood at the Sydney Fish Markets to put the seafood platter together in today’s video!

The seafood platter in today’s post was our team lunch!

THREE RULES WE LIVE BY for tastier seafood*

  1. Always buy Australian.

  2. The less it’s been frozen, the better.

  3. Avoid pre-packaged* (it’s stinky). Buy fresh from open displays.

* There are some exceptions and explanations to this rule, noted against specific items. See Seafood Buying Tips section below for more information!

SUMMARY – What we put on our seafood platter

Here is a summary list of what goes on our seafood platter. Please see below sections on the why, why not, and extra tips. Note: I’m in Sydney, Australia.

1. pre-cooked seafood, served cold

This is the seafood we get that we purchased pre-cooked, or seafood that is served raw. Everything we get is Australian – we specifically ensure it is because we know it will be better.

  1. Prawns (pre-cooked) – Tiger, king or banana prawns.

  2. Oysters – Pacific or Sydney Rock (Tasmanian and Merimbula oysters are my favourites)

  3. Morton Bay Bugs (over Balmain Bugs) – Pre-cooked.

  4. Blue swimmer crabs (best over 350g) – Pre-cooked. Alternatively: Spanner crabs, but read crab section below (including king crab & mud crab advice).

  5. Sashimi – Kingfish, tuna, salmon are most common

  6. Smoked salmon – Sold in packets, I only get Huon (Tasmanian).

  7. Dipping sauces – Our Family Favourite Seafood Sauce, and Tartare or Marie Rose sauce (recipes here)

TIPS: Seafood quality is better at fish mongers and the fish markets, one reason being they look after it better than large chain grocery stores. For all the above, we only get Australian, and seafood that’s undergone as little freezing as possible. The freshest seafood has never been frozen: caught and sold ideally on the same day. However the reality is some seafood has to be snap frozen at sea before reaching market and is sold thawed. This includes even cooked prawns at the fish markets during Christmas time. Done properly, excellent seafood quality is still maintained.

But the point is, the less freezing-thawing cycles, the better. The worst is: Caught > frozen > thawed > cooked > frozen > thawed (like cheap lobster at grocery stores likely is). Quality degrades with each step!

2. luxury seafoods – ONLY BUY if you can afford quality

Here are the top-ticket seafood platter signatures that we strongly recommend only buying if you can afford good quality. And by no means will your platter be any less delicious without them! These are not regulars on our seafood platter.

  1. Lobster (crayfish) – Not worth it unless you can afford $100+/kg for high quality lobster. The cheap grocery store lobsters are rubbish (sorry, but they are). Lobster serving recipes here.

  2. King crab (~$90/kg) – Everybody loves the big meaty crab legs! While they are sold pre-cooked for convenience, we find the pre-cooked product very hit and miss. King crab is imported which can also play a part in the variability of quality. So we stopped buying pre-cooked king crab after too many disappointments for such an expensive food. Want king crab? Best buy raw legs and cook it yourself.

  3. Mud crab (~$90/kg) – Buy it live and cook it yourself (here’s how to prepare mud crab). You don’t see often see frozen or cooked mud crab. If buying cooked mud crab, check with the seller how fresh it is and when it was alive (we are suspicious by nature and assume it was half dead so they cooked it).

3. SEAFOOD WE COOK (SOMETIMES)

Left to right: Crispy Salt & Pepper Squid, Marinated Baby Octopus and Mussels

While our seafood platter is mostly comprised of cold pre-cooked seafood, if we do have cooked seafood, these are the dishes we most commonly include.

  1. Baby octopusPurchased in bags frozen or raw, marinated then BBQ’d until the legs are charred and crispy! Rare seafood item that freezes well.

  2. Mussels – Cooked ahead and served at room temperature (it’s so great!). Mussels are a rare seafood item that vac packs well. Our favourite brand are Kinkawooka blue mussels (best quality, juiciest!) – look for the purple bag, sold even at regular grocery stores.

  3. Salt and pepper squid – 3 years in the making, we finally cracked the perfect salt and pepper squid! This is on the RecipeTin Family Christmas menu for this year. Recipe coming before Christmas…

4. STANDARD SIDES

Here are the standard sides we serve alongside a seafood platter:

And honestly, that’s all we do. We keep it simple to let the seafood shine! Also, because Christmas should be about be relaxing not slaving in the kitchen, is our motto. 🙂

5. GOING THE EXTRA MILE

If we’re feeling particularly inspired or have VIP guests, we will go the extra mile and add “special” extra dishes. Things we reach for include:

  • Christmas Baked Salmon – A big statement side of salmon that’s made for Christmas festivities!

  • Crispy Beer Battered Fish – and I exaggerate not when I say they are crispy and stay crispy!

  • Crispy Homemade Friesthey’re crispy even long after they cool

  • Store bought potato gems (tater tots) – I’m not even going to pretend we attempt to make these. We buy frozen, we love ’em, and I’m not ashamed to tell the world! For special occasions, we even deep fry them instead of baking (OMG I know, you’re horrified).

  • Chinese Honey Prawns – OMG YES!!! Crunchier than you’ve ever had at any Chinese restaurant, these will blow your mind!

  • Singapore Chilli Crab – A big, giant, statement main.

  • Whole Baked Fish – The dill butter sauce is everything….

  • Any other seafood or fish recipe – here’s the full collection.

5. seafood sauces

With the above fresh seafood, we simply serve with fresh lemon wedges and two sauces (recipes here):

  1. Family Favourite Seafood Sauce – A family staple. Everybody who’s tried this sauce loves it! It’s essentially a mash up of Marie Rose Sauce and Tartare sauce with the added freshness from dill. It’s a bit special, and always a hit. 🙂

  2. Marie Rose / Thousand Island – The classic pink sauce.

  3. Cocktail Seafood Sauce – A piquant red sauce that goes heavier on the tomato sauce (ketchup).

  4. Tartare Sauce – It’s amazing how much better homemade tastes, even using jar mayo. Yet so simple!

  5. Thai Chilli Lime Sauce – Tangy with lime and hit of sweet chilli, for a lovely no-mayo fresh sauce alternative.

Our standard choice is the Family Favourite Seafood Sauce plus either Marie Rose or Tartare.

Find all the Seafood Dipping Sauces here.


More about each seafood item

I warned you I have a lot to say about seafood!! 😂 So in this section, I’m delving into more details about each.

Prawns

5 great Prawn Dipping Sauces: Cocktail / Seafood Sauce, Tartare, Marie Rose / Thousand Island, or a Thai Chilli Lime Sauce for something fresher. recipetineats.com

Prawns are a dependable favourite in Australia, and we are blessed with an abundance of excellent quality prawns! The 3 most common varieties are:

  1. Tiger prawns – More salty and savoury.

  2. King prawns – More of a sweet flavour. (You’d expect them to be larger, but they aren’t always!).

  3. Banana prawns – Sweet, mild flavour, and often more economical

We love them all, and will happily eat any of them.

TIPS

  • We buy them pre-cooked – Most Australian prawns are cooked soon after being caught, which locks in freshness and flavour. As long as they are fresh, the quality is excellent. You could also buy them raw and boil yourself.

  • Be sure to get Australian prawns because the flavour is superior, the flesh is sweeter, and to support the Australian fishing industry! While most tiger and king prawns are locally sourced, imported banana prawns are more common. Just take note of the display label.

  • Avoid pre-packaged prawns. They can be less fresh and stinky, beware! If that’s all you can get, take them out well before serving, give them a good rinse then leave to air dry.

  • TOP TIP: Ask for a taste test before you buy!


Moreton Bay bugs – the better value lobster

This is one of our gold nugget tips! 🥰

We prefer to eat Moreton Bay bugs instead of lobster. They taste similar to lobster yet are about 70% cheaper at ~$40/kg. In fact, Moreton Bay bugs (and Balmain bugs) are a slipper lobster and are closely related to rock lobsters, so the flavour similarity is not surprising!

Moreton Bay bugs also have a higher meat-to-shell ratio (30-40% yield) than lobster and are easier to cut. They are more compact in shape, so easier to store too. They are caught on the northern part of Australia’s coast, mostly off the coast of Queensland.

We buy them pre-cooked (orange-coloured) which is the most common way they are sold, though you can get them raw (aka “green”, on the right below) and cook yourself (just boil them).

Balmain bugs vs Moreton Bay bugs – Balmain Bugs are the other species of slipper lobsters sold in Australia. We usually buy Moreton Bay over Balmain bugs, as we prefer the milder flavour, find the quality usually more reliable, and they’re also generally larger. Also, just FYI, despite the name, Balmain bugs aren’t actually caught in the Balmain area of Sydney! They are caught across the southern coastline of Australia, though mainly in NSW. But if you can’t find Moreton Bay bugs, Balmain bugs is a solid alternative.


Oysters

Here in Australia, we have two varieties of oysters: Pacific oysters and Sydney Rock oysters. Pacific oysters tend to be larger, with a fleshy, creamy texture. The flavour is clean and mild. Sydney Rock Oysters tend to be smaller, sometimes with yellow-tinged flesh and have a meatier mouthfeel. The flavour is stronger and more complex than Pacific oysters.

I love both of them!

Both these oysters are grown in various areas across Australia, and the region in which they are grown affects quality and flavour. I am particularly fond of Tasmanian-grown oysters (clean flavour without a bitter finish, and some are gigantic!). Merimbula is a Sydney fine-dining favourite source as are Port Stephens and Batemans Bay. Boomer Bay is a recent one I tried that I enjoyed as well.

Buy them already shucked (ie. opened) and serve with lemon wedges, that’s all you need. Though, if you’d like to try a sauce, 3 of our favourites are coming before Christmas!

JB’s classic oyster mignonette sauce recipe is coming soon!

Crab

I have a bizarre amount of information to share about crab! Possibly because I love crab but it’s expensive – and it’s a pain to pick out the meat especially if you buy certain types. 😂

Raw blue swimmer crab
Blue Swimmer Crabs are our go-to for seafood platters, but make sure they’re large!

So here’s my thoughts on crab:

  • Blue swimmer crab (~$35/kg) – This Australian favourite is our preference for value, flavour and quality as long as they are on the large size (350g/ 12 oz+). Anything smaller and the ratio of meat-to-shell is too low, and it’s a pain to pick the meat out of tiny legs. Buy it cooked, or buy raw and cook yourself (just boil).

  • Spanner crab (~$35/kg) is also good value but the crab’s anatomy is very different to blue swimmer crabs. The meat is mostly in the body, which is proportionally large while the claws are small and flat. The crab flesh is deliciously sweet. However it is quite fine and more crumbly than other crabs. Buy it cooked. You don’t often see it raw.

  • King crab – People love king crab because of the extremely meaty legs and claws, and the firm, sweet flesh. But it’s expensive! We recommend giving frozen cooked king crab a miss. Over the years, we’ve found it hit and miss, as it’s sometimes disappointingly flavourless – such a waste of money 😭. If you want king crab, buy the uncooked legs and cook yourself. Note that king crab is mostly imported and as a general rule, this can affect reliability of quality. Excess freezing really seems to degrade the quality of crab.

  • Mud crab – The king of all Aussie crabs! We love it (especially Singapore Chilli Crab), but as it is sold live it is quite expensive and you have to cook it yourself. You rarely see it frozen or pre-cooked. When we do, we are suspicious as it’s hard to know how fresh the crab was prior to cooking.

Cutting crab for serving – directions in the recipe card! There’s even a video. 🙂

Raw mud crab
A fresh mud crab for Singapore Chilli Crab.

Sashimi (raw fish)

Yes, we do! Totally at home on a seafood platter 🙂

There’s no need to get loads, just a little bit, for extra variety in the platter amongst all that shellfish. We just go to the sashimi bar at the Sydney Fish Markets and get what looks good or what we feel like. Kingfish, tuna and salmon are favourites, but we love to mix it up if there are other interesting fish varieties on offer.


Smoked salmon

A nice easy one to include on the seafood platter. Everybody loves it, and again, it adds to variety and abundance!

The only smoked salmon I get is Huon Salmon. I know there’s a lot of debate about the sustainability of salmon farming here in Australia. However based on my research (and also a visit to their farms in Tasmania), I believe Huon’s farming practices to be more sustainable than the other major brand here in Australia and imported economical brands, and kinder to local wildlife.


Cooked mussels

A recent addition to our cold seafood platter: cooked mussels served at room temperature. It’s so good! They present nicely if you dice up the vegetables really small so you can scatter them on the mussels for presentation purposes. Serve them in the half shell, spooning some mussel cooking liquor sauce into the shells to keep them moist and add some lovely extra flavour.

The mussels pictured above were cooked using this cookbook recipe but this recipe will also work (similar). Just remember to dice up the vegetables extra small for an elegant look, like pictured above.

Our favourite brand of mussels is Kinkawooka which are available at grocery stores as well as fish mongers. Compared to other brands, the mussels are considerably heavier which means they are meatier and juicier.


Lobster (actually, crayfish)

Cooked lobsters

So, here’s the thing with lobster. It is not a regular on our seafood platters. As noted above, we usually get Moreton Bay bugs instead because it’s so similar but far better value and logistically easier to cut, store etc.

However, I do have knowledge to impart about lobster because I have a friend who catches local lobsters and shares them with me. Also, there was that time during the pandemic when our lobster export industry came to a standstill due to trade tensions with China, so there was an abundance of lobsters usually sold upwards of $100 at fish mongers going for $20 at regular grocery stores.

So I’ve actually developed a fair amount of experience cooking with lobster without shelling out an extortionate amount to buy them!

Buying lobster

If you want lobster on your seafood platter, just to reiterate what I’ve said multiple times earlier, be prepared to pay top dollar for it – $100/kg+. There is honestly no point buying the cheap ones (~$10 tails) at grocery stores, they taste like nothing! You are better off using that budget for more prawns.

Choose Australian lobster – cooked is great (it’s boiled freshly caught at sea). Then head over to my lobster recipes to choose one! There are 6 lobster recipes, all of which are suited for inclusion in a seafood platter, along with how to cut and prepare lobster.

PS It’s crayfish, not lobster

And just for a bit of food trivia: What most people call “lobster” here in Australia technically are not lobsters, they are crayfish. They are almost the same in appearance, but they don’t have the giant pincers that lobsters have in the US and Europe. We don’t have true lobsters here in Australia. 😊

TOP TIPS FOR BUYING & storing SEAFOOD

Here are some tips for buying seafood. The overarching principle to remember is that seafood is highly perishable, so needs to be handled properly to maintain quality. Most seafood loses quality (texture especially but also flavour) when not frozen properly or frozen-then-thawed excessively.

  1. Buy Australian. It might not be the cheapest, but it’s tastier. Why? The quality of our fisheries and processors, and proximity to the consumer means a fresher product.

  2. Buy fresh rather than frozen. Every time seafood is frozen, quality is lost (flavour, texture). Though, there are a few exceptions, like baby octopus, noted in the sections above.

  3. Pre-cooked seafood is excellent – and that’s what we mostly buy (prawns, crab, Morton bay bugs). It’s boiled at sea soon after being caught to lock in freshness and flavour!

  4. Don’t stretch your budget and get swept up in the “must have lobster” frenzy – unless you can afford the good stuff. Cheap lobster tastes of nothing – been there, done that!! Instead, buy more prawns. 🙂

  5. Buy from fresh seafood displays rather than pre-packaged. It’s just fresher and better when seafood can breathe and is on display for shoppers to see. Pre-packaged seafood (vacuum sealed or in containers with cling wrap) gets stinky and who knows how long it’s been in the pack. I particularly avoid vacuum-sealed seafood with a shelf life of weeks. That’s just plain wrong!

  6. The sniff test – It’s easy to tell if your seafood is fresh: just smell it. Fresh seafood smells like the ocean. Not very fresh seafood smells unpleasant and “fishy”! Before tossing it though, give it a good rinse. Sometimes, the “off” smell can just be the juices from poorly packaged or handled seafood. This is why I prefer buying seafood from open displays rather than pre-packaged.

  7. Never re-freeze seafood that’s been previously frozen. You can cook thawed raw seafood, then freeze it. But should never thaw raw or cooked seafood bought frozen, then freeze it again. (The exception is seafood that may have been industrially frozen at sea – see earlier explanations).

  8. Avoid storing seafood in plastic bags where possible – To keep seafood fresh longer, don’t store in plastic bags – especially if overnight or longer. Moisture and lack of air circulation accelerate the spoiling process. Move your seafood to a roomy container or deep plate with a rack at the bottom so air can circulate around it. Wrap loosely with cling film. The seafood stays fresher longer and avoids that awful sliminess and fishy smell that builds up if left suffocating in fish juice in a plastic bag!

Why we buy pre-cooked seafood

Pre-cooked prawns

Our seafood platter is predominantly cold seafood that we purchased already cooked. The reason for this is simple – the quality of pre-cooked seafood here in Australia is excellent (if you know what to buy) and it’s convenient.

If you’re thinking – surely raw seafood I cook myself is going to be better – it can be true, but it’s often pricier and extra work to prepare!

Actually, pre-cooked seafood can be some of the best tasting seafood you buy because it’s boiled at sea as soon as it is caught, locking in fresh flavour when it is at its prime. Prawns are a great example of this, with most prawns sold at fish mongers here in Australia sold pre-cooked.

Pre-cooking also deals with the logistical challenge associated with how highly perishable seafood is because it extends the shelf life, as well as making the seafood more affordable for consumers.


Where I buy seafood

For special occasions, I go to the Sydney Fish Markets where you get better selection and more consistently higher quality. But on a day to day basis, I just go to my local fish monger.

Mud Crab at Sydney Fish Markets

I generally do not buy seafood from the grocery store, just because I find the quality is not that great and is not always handled with the care it should be.

I do think though that here in Australia, we are very lucky to have an abundance of good quality seafood, so even seafood from grocery stores is actually not that bad. I’m just a bit fussy – I’d rather indulge in seafood less often and spend a little more to get good quality seafood when I do. That’s just the way I roll. 🙂


How we put together the seafood platter

And with all that information and opinions shared, we finally arrive at the serving and eating part!

For the RecipeTin Family, one of the things that appeals to us about a seafood platter is that it’s essentially no-cook, and it’s a cold main which is ideal for hot summer Aussie Christmases. So you literally pull it out of the fridge, pile it up onto platters then serve!

OK, OK. I can give a little more guidance here, in case you’re interested. Here we go:

  1. Ice bed – If we have ice, we will spread that onto a big serving platter, tray or multiple plates. This not only keeps the seafood cold, but also provides a nice non-slip bed to put the seafood on.

  2. Assembling – Pile the seafood on the ice, randomly scatter lemon wedges around then nestle in bowls of sauces. A few sprigs of parsley might also make it onto the platter – but that’s really going above and beyond. 😂

Laying out the seafood

There’s no rules for the way I lay out the seafood, except logistical considerations:

  • Oysters laid out mostly in a single layer or carefully shingled to avoid the oyster juices from spilling

  • Mussels laid out the same as oysters so the sauce stays in without spilling

  • Prawns, Moreton Bay bugs and crab – piled high (reserve the crab carapace (top shell) for decoration)

  • Sashimi – fanned out

  • Smoked salmon – randomly draped around

Matters of serving (tip: finger bowls!)

To serve, we put the platters out along with plenty of napkins, bowls for discarded shells and finger bowls of water with lemon slices for people to dip their hands in for a brief clean before diving back in for more seafood.

How else can I help you?

And with that, I think I am done! Or – am I? Are there any critical things I’ve missed? Is there other seafood you’d like to know about? Such as, let’s say, abalone. A highly prized delicacy here in Australia – why doesn’t it make our cut, you may be wondering??

This and any other questions you have, please leave them below and we will do our best to address them and update this post with extra information. I can’t promise I will continue to do this beyond Christmas 2023, but I can promise that we will monitor questions and update this post leading up to Christmas Day. Because the whole purpose of doing today’s post is to help readers who want to put together an amazing seafood platter!

I hope you find this useful and enjoy the little video of my shopping trip to the Sydney Fish Markets to choose and purchase seafood for the seafood platter featured in this post. – Nagi x


Watch how to make it

Video of me choosing seafood at the Sydney Fish Markets and putting a seafood platter together:

Also, a little tutorial on how to cut and prepare Moreton Bay Bugs and Balmain Bugs for your seafood platter:

RecipeTin Seafood platter
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Seafood Platter

Video above! This is what we put on our seafood platter. Our preference is to buy most seafood pre-cooked (boiled at sea) and serve it cold. See the post above for why we choose these items – it's all about best quality and best value for money! Varieties of seafood specified are for Australia.
Top tips: Buy Australian (or locally caught, wherever you are in this world) and where possible buy fresh rather than thawed/frozen (most seafood loses quality when frozen). Don't buy cheap lobster, it's a total waste of money. Get Moreton Bay bugs instead (it's so similar, but cheaper) or more prawns instead. Avoid buying pre-packaged if you can, it's fresher from open displays!
Course Main
Cuisine Australian, Western
Keyword seafood platter
Servings 8
Author Nagi

Ingredients

  • 2 kg / 3 lb whole prawns , pre-cooked, shell on (Tiger, King or Banana prawns)
  • 24 oysters – Sydney Rock or Pacific , love both (Tasmanian, Merimbula and Port Stephens are favourites)
  • 4 blue swimmer crabs (400g/14oz+) (not smaller), pre-cooked in shell, whole
  • 8 Moreton Bay bugs , pre-cooked in shell, whole (fallback – Balmain Bugs)
  • 200g / 7 oz smoked salmon (Huon is the only Australian one I get)
  • 250g / 8 oz sashimi , pre-sliced (tuna, kingfish or salmon)
  • 1 kg / 2 lb mussels – cooked, served at room temp (Note 5)

Seafood Sauces (choose 2) – all recipes here:

  • Cocktail Seafood Sauce
  • Tartare Sauce
  • Marie Rose / Thousand Island (top pick)
  • Thai Chilli Lime Sauce
  • RecipeTin Family Favourite Seafood Sauce (top pick)

Other sauces:

  • Sauces for oysters (selection coming next week)
  • Soy sauce and wasabi , for sashimi

Serving:

  • Ice , optional (crushed if you can, else normal)
  • Lemon wedges (lots!)
  • Parsley sprigs (for decorating, if you're feeling fancy)
  • Bowls , to discard shells
  • Finger bowls , filled with water and lemon slices
  • Napkins (lots!)

Our standard side dishes

  • Good bread with good butter or good extra virgin olive oil (Try this easy Crusty Artisan Bread)
  • Perky green salad or vegetable sticks (crudites), see in post for suggestions
  • Lots of cold beer, wine and champagne!

Extra dishes pictured in post and the video

  • Marinated crispy baby octoptus
  • The crispiest salt and pepper squid (recipe coming soon!)
  • Cheese and crackers (because I just have to!)
  • More extras – see notes

Instructions

  • Purchase all seafood as close as possible to the serving date. We often do the 5AM shop at the Sydney Fish Markets on Christmas Eve, because we are slightly crazy! We don't order online (we like to choose our own).
  • Storage – Cooked seafood will easily keep 2 days, fresh raw for cooking will too if you take it out of the plastic bags, put in a colander or similar and very loosely cover with cling wrap (breathing = less stinky).
  • Crab – To cut the crab, follow directions in How to Cut a Whole Crab except DO NOT cut off the claws if you are using a Blue Swimmer Crab. (See note)
  • Moreton Bay bug – To cut the bug, flip it on to its back. Cut down through the middle (the shell is not too hard). Clean out the yellow and brown matter in the head, then it's ready to serve. Recipe video above.
  • Sauce – Make your sauces of choice. They will be used for dipping prawns, Moreton Bay bugs and crab (I also use for vegetable sticks and bread!). Refrigerate until required (2 days+).
  • Mussels – Make mussels, if using. Great served at room temperature on a cold seafood platter.

Assembling:

  • Ice (optional) – Cover a large platter with ice. This keeps the seafood cold as well as providing a non-slip bed.
  • Pile the prawns, crab and bugs on to the platter. Drape smoked salmon randomly around. Fan out the sushi.
  • Oysters Place them level to avoid the juices in the shells spilling out (what a waste!).
  • Mussels Break off one shell, and serve in the remaining shell. Then place the mussels in a single layer, or shingled (stacked but level). Spoon on a little of the diced vegetables and some reserved mussel cooking liquor.
  • Sauce and lemon – Nestle bowls filled with sauces amongst the seafood and scatter over lemon wedges. Serve alongside finger bowls for cleaning and bowls to discard shells, and lots of napkins. Fill glasses with wine, cheers to Christmas! Now dive in!

Notes

Extra suggestions to add on the side: Christmas Baked Salmon, Crispy Beer Battered Fish, Homemade Fries, frozen store bought potato gems (tater tots), Chinese Honey Prawns, Singapore Chilli Crab, Whole Baked Fish any other seafood or fish recipe – here’s the full collection.

See in post for more tips and thoughts on each item listed. Summary points below!
  1. Prawns – Tiger, king and banana prawns in Australia are all great, though if I had to pick one I’d choose tiger prawns (I love the salty slightly more intense flavour). Watch out for imported – Australian prawns are superior in flavour.
  2. Oyster – Both Sydney Rock (smaller, stronger flavour) and Pacific (fleshier, cleaner flavour) oysters are great. These are the two varieties here in Australia. The quality and flavour comes down to where and how they are grown.
  3. Moreton Bay bugs – The “better value lobster”!. At ~$40/kg, they’re easier to cut, to eat and have a higher meat-to-shell ratio. There’s really no point getting cheap lobster, tastes of nothing. If you get lobster, you need to spend $100/kg+. Don’t bother with cheap lobster!
  4. Crab – Blue swimmer crabs for the best for flavour (in our view) and value, but don’t get small ones <350g/12oz, it’s a pain to get the meat out. Spanner crab is also great but all the meat is in the shell (cut per same directions). Mud crab and king crab – please read in post for our view on these (buy raw, make sure it’s Australian, and cook yourself), they are expensive so get it right!
  5. Mussels – cooked using this cookbook recipe or this recipe,  but dice the vegetables very small (to use as garnish on mussels). Cool to room temperature then serve on platter.

Life of Dozer

One of my favourite photos of Dozer in the cookbook. Buried smack bang in the middle of the book, it must be quite a shock for people who don’t know me to be flicking through tasty food photos then suddenly come across this!! 😂 (Page 174, Restaurant Worthy Prawn Linguine).

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Roast Lamb Leg with Gravy https://www.recipetineats.com/roast-lamb-leg-with-gravy/ https://www.recipetineats.com/roast-lamb-leg-with-gravy/#comments Fri, 24 Mar 2023 02:07:14 +0000 https://www.recipetineats.com/?p=17187 Roast lamb leg with roast potatoesI love a good roast lamb (proof). Here’s my classic recipe for lamb leg, rubbed with garlic and rosemary, served with gravy, peas, carrots and crispy roast potatoes (duck fat or classic). I hope you love it as much as I do! The only thing you need to know for perfect roast lamb leg I... Get the Recipe

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I love a good roast lamb (proof). Here’s my classic recipe for lamb leg, rubbed with garlic and rosemary, served with gravy, peas, carrots and crispy roast potatoes (duck fat or classic). I hope you love it as much as I do!

Roast lamb leg dinner with sides

The only thing you need to know for perfect roast lamb leg

I have a lot to say about roasting any kind of meat. Especially Australia’s favourite roast – the great lamb leg. But there’s really only one thing you need to know to make perfect roast lamb leg, every single time:

GET A MEAT THERMOMETER!!

It’s the only way you can take the guesswork out of cooking lamb leg so it’s perfect blushing pink and ridiculously juicy inside. Because – and here’s something Aussies don’t like to talk about – lamb leg is actually very lean so if it’s not pink, it’s dry. Full stop, end of story!

My meat thermometer – For most of my adult life, I was using a $5 thermometer I got on Ebay which never failed me. A few years ago I finally decided it was time to invest in a real one so I got a Thermapen which is pretty well regarded as the best (my thoughts here). Even if you can’t invest in a Thermapen – it’s the 21st century, and even cheap tech isn’t so bad. Invest in a $5 meat thermometer. That’s a lot cheaper than a wasted, overcooked lamb leg!

Thermapen – my beloved meat thermometer

Carving Roast lamb leg

OK, I do have a few more “how to make the perfect roast lamb leg” tips!

  1. Garlic rosemary rub – classic lamb flavours.

  2. Start on high to get the colour going then lower heat.

  3. Roast on a bed of garlic (or onion).

  4. Make the gravy using the pan drippings. Roast lamb gravy is better than every other cut of meat – beef, chicken, pork, none of them compare!

Roast lamb leg dinner plate

What you need for roast lamb leg

Starting with the hero ingredient – the lamb leg! Get the best you can afford – yes, meat is like wine, the more you pay, the better the quality. Quality of life of the animal also comes into play there.

Raw lamb leg

All that red ink you see is perfectly safe to eat and actually, you only see it on better quality lamb. You don’t typically see it on supermarket lamb.

Cut bone – Some (most?) butchers and almost all supermarkets sell lamb leg with the shank (bone) cut. Either fully cut off or partially cut so it folds. This is simply for practical reasons – shelf storage and packing space. For grandness, I like the bone in tact. But it doesn’t matter ,it’s purely a visual decision!

Rub for roast lamb leg

Here’s what you need for the rub: rosemary, garlic, olive oil, salt and pepper. Use fresh rosemary – dried is not the same!

Ingredients for Roast lamb leg rub

Roast lamb gravy

All you need for gravy is flour for thickening and beef stock/broth for the liquid. You shouldn’t need extra salt for the gravy. I find the salt on the lamb that ends up in the pan drippings plus the salt in the beef stock is enough. But taste and add more if you want!

Ingredients in Gravy for Roast lamb leg

Why beef rather than lamb stock? Well, there’s a reason lamb stock is not typically sold at grocery stores! It’s just very…lamby. 🙂 Beef has a cleaner flavour. It doesn’t make the gravy taste beefy at all because there is so much lamb flavour from the drippings.

Why not chicken stock? It works fine but the gravy colour is paler. I like my gravy for roast lamb leg to be a really deep brown colour!


How to make roast lamb leg

Rub with rosemary and garlic, roast in a hot oven to get the colour going then continue at a lower temperature for 1 hour or until the internal temperature is 53°C/127°F (for blushing pink perfection). Rest for 20 minutes before carving. It will still be very warm even after 1 hour – enough time to make duck fat potatoes!

How to make Roast lamb leg

The lamb leg pictured is a 2.75 kg lamb leg which is about the average size you get from good butchers. Supermarket lamb legs tend to be a little larger from slightly older animals which makes the meat a little less tender and a little stronger “lamby” flavour. Albeit, as you’d expect, cheaper than from butchers.

  1. Make rub – Mix oil, garlic and rosemary in a bowl.

  2. Rub then sprinkle – Slather the rub all over the lamb, then sprinkle the salt and pepper all over. It’s better to do it this way for more even dispersion of salt – if you put it in the oil, it doesn’t spread quite as evenly because it pools in the bottom of the bowl.

    I do this rubbing step in the roasting pan – why dirty a cutting board??

  3. Garlic bed – Place cut garlic and rosemary under the lamb.

  4. Hot oven 20 minutes – Roast for 20 minutes in a hot 240°C/475°F (220°C fan) oven. This will get the colour going on the lamb. It’s tempting to go longer to get even more colour on it but I find if you go beyond 20 minutes you end up with too much overcooked meat “ring” on the outer edges of the lamb.

  5. 1 hour lower oven – Reduce heat to 200°C / 400°F (180°C fan) and roast for a further 1 hour or until the internal temperature of the lamb is 53°C/127°F for blushing pink perfection.

    Check the internal temperature at the 45 minute mark. Never rely on a recipe cook time for roast meat, use your thermometer! So many variables can affect the exact roasting time, from oven strength to pan heat distribution, the shape of the lamb leg and how cold the meat is right in the middle.

    See below for more information on lamb doneness and different size lambs.

  6. Rest 20 minutes – Rest the lamb for 20 minutes before carving. During this resting stage, the lamb finishes cooking and the internal temperature will rise to 62°C/144°F which is perfect medium rare for lamb.

    Also during resting, the lamb juices get re-absorbed by the meat fibres so when you cut into the meat, the juices remain in the meat and eventually end up in your mouth. If you do not rest the meat then the meat juices leak out everywhere when you start carving the lamb.

Internal temperature of roast lamb leg

No credible restaurant would ever serve lamb leg at anything over than medium rare! But I do know some people like their lamb done a little more, so here are the internal temperatures for lamb leg at different levels of doneness.

Take the lamb out when it hits the “temperature out of oven”. After resting for 20 minutes it will rise to your target level of doneness.

Close up of Roast lamb leg

TIP: Take the lamb out early!!!

This is one of the most common mistakes people make when roasting lamb. If you want medium rare lamb and you take the lamb leg out of the oven when it hits 62°C/144°F (which is the medium rare target temperature), it will rise to 73°C/163°F once rested which is well done – no hint of pink at all! This occurs because the lamb continues to cook after you take it out of the oven due to residual heat. It’s called carry-over cooking.

So if you want medium rare, perfectly pink lamb leg, you need to take it out of the oven once the internal temperature reaches 53°C/127°F. At this temperature, the lamb is rare.

But when you rest the lamb for 20 minutes, it will continue to cook and the internal temperature will rise by 9°C/17°F to 62°C/144°F. This temperature is medium rare, the optimum doneness for lamb leg so it’s beautifully juicy. Any more and the lamb meat is drier than ideal, because lamb leg is a lean meat.


How to make gravy for roast lamb leg

Gravy for lamb leg is made using the pan drippings after roasting the lamb. “Drippings” simply refers to the fat and meat juices left in the roasting pan after roasting the meat and it’s our express, free path to a killer gravy.

How to make Roast lamb leg
  1. Heat drippings & cook flour – Once you take the lamb out of the roasting pan, put it straight on the stove to heat the fat. Add flour and stir it for 1 minute to cook it off – it will kind of be like a paste.

  2. Pour in the beef stock, stirring as you go to help dissolve the flour.

  3. Smush the garlic with a potato masher or even a smooth to help release the beautiful caramelised garlic flesh into the gravy.

  4. Strain – Then just simmer for a few minutes until the gravy thickens to your taste then strain into a bowl, pressing the gravy liquid out of the garlic heads. Then pour into a jug to serve!

Pouring gravy over Roast lamb leg

Roast lamb leg with roast potatoes

And that, my friends, is everything you need to know to be the king (or queen) of roast lamb leg from this day forth. The precision by which you roast your lamb to blushing pink perfection will be admired. Your gravy will be whispered about in your circles – the flavour!!! It’s incredible!

Just smile sedately, sit back and bask in the praise. There is no need to reveal your recipe source. 😎

The lamb leg in this post is pictured with duck fat potatoes (the best crispy potatoes in the world!) with peas and steamed carrots tossed with a little butter and parsley. If you don’t have duck fat, make my classic crunchy roast potatoes instead. They are still way crunchier than your usual way of making them.

Go forth and enjoy your new lamb-alicious world! If you’ve got your own lamb leg secrets, sharing in the comments below – readers love hearing what you have to say. – Nagi x


Watch how to make it

Roast lamb leg with roast potatoes
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Roast Lamb Leg with Gravy

Recipe video above. I love a roast lamb leg! My top tip is to use a meat thermometer. There's no way to guarantee perfect blushing pink roast lamb without one, even if it's a cheap one!
Rubbed with rosemary garlic and accompanied with a killer gravy for lamb. Serve with peas, buttered steamed carrots and crunchy roast potatoes (either classic or ultra crunchy duck fat potatoes).
Course Dinner
Cuisine Aussie, British, New Zealand
Keyword Roast Lamb Leg
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour 40 minutes
De-chilling and resting time 1 hour 30 minutes
Total Time 15 minutes
Servings 6 -8
Calories 450cal
Author Nagi | RecipeTin Eats

Ingredients

  • 2.75 – 3 kg / 5.5 – 6 lb lamb leg , bone-in (Note 1)
  • 1 1/2 tsp cooking salt
  • 1/2 tsp black pepper

Rub

  • 1 1/2 tbsp fresh rosemary leaves , finely chopped
  • 3 garlic cloves , finely minced
  • 2 tbsp olive oil

Base

  • 2 whole heads of garlic , halved horizontally (Note 2)
  • Few sprigs rosemary (optional)

Gravy

  • 4 tbsp flour , plain/all purpose
  • 2 1/2 cups beef broth / stock , low sodium (Note 3)

Instructions

  • Take lamb out of fridge at least 1 hour before roasting. (Note 4)
  • Preheat oven to 240°C/475°F (220°C fan) with oven shelf in the middle.
  • Rub – Mix rosemary, garlic and olive oil.
  • Prepare lamb – Place lamb leg in a roasting pan. Coat with the rub using your hands, the sprinkle with the salt and pepper. Place garlic and rosemary sprigs underneath the lamb, garlic cut face up.
  • Roast lamb leg for 20 minutes. Turn the oven down to 200°C/400°F (180°C fan) and roast for a further 1 hour or until the internal temperature reaches 53°C/127°F for medium rare (Note 5 other doneness). Check first at 45 minutes – everyone's oven is different!
  • Rest – Remove lamb from oven. Transfer lamb to plate, loosely cover with foil and rest for 20 minutes to 1 hour (it will still be warm enough for serving!). The internal temperature will rise to 62°C/144°F (medium rare). Make gravy while lamb is resting – below.
  • Serve lamb with gravy, duck fat or classic crunchy roast potatoes, peas and steamed carrots tossed with butter and parsley.

Gravy for roast lamb leg

  • Drippings in pan – Discard rosemary sprigs. You should have around 4 – 5 tbsp of fat (drippings). If less, add butter. If much more, discard a bit.
  • Add flour – Place roasting pan on stove over medium heat. When the fat starts to bubble, then add flour. Mix flour in and cook for 1 minute.
  • Stock – Pour in half the beef stock and mix to dissolve sludge in, then add remaining beef stock and mix.
  • Garlic squidging – Use a potato masher (if you're really keen like me) to mush the garlic to squeeze out the flavour (also helps flour caught in garlic to dissolve).
  • Taste – Check salt and pepper (I don't add more).
  • Thicken – Simmer for a couple of minutes, stirring, until it starts to thicken. Take it off the stove BEFORE the gravy is the thickness you want because it will keep thickening.
  • Strain into a bowl, mushing garlic to squeeze all the liquid out. Then pour into gravy jug and serve with lamb!

Notes

Roast lamb leg cook times
1. Lamb leg – Recipe is based on a whole lamb leg. See roasting time table above for different lamb sizes. Sometimes the bone sticking out is removed, sometimes it is partially cut so it folds inwards. It doesn’t matter either way, but just ensure the bone inside the meat is not removed. (If it is, you have a butterflied lamb leg – use this recipe instead).
Boneless lamb – I love making Greek butterflied lamb leg. If yours is rolled and tied, you could make this recipe but the meat is not quite as juicy because it’s been cut to remove the bone so there’s more escape roots for meat juices! If you can, unroll the lamb to do the rub then roll it back up and tie again (excellent flavour infusion!). Also, cook time likely a bit shorter. I’d do the 20 minute high temp blast, lower oven then check at 40 minute mark.
 2. Garlic base – Elevates the lamb slightly so it cooks more evenly and allows the fat to drip over the garlic so the flavour infuses into the drippings that then forms the base of the gravy. Place garlic cut side up so the flavour infuses into the flesh of the lamb.
It is not garlicky at all because when garlic roasts, it becomes sweet and caramelised. It is my big secret for making a killer gravy for roast lamb! You can use 1 onion, quarters (skin on) instead of or in addition to garlic.
3. Gravy for lamb is best made with beef stock/broth because it has a deeper flavour and makes the gravy a beautiful dark brown colour. Store bought is fine, though homemade makes it ultra restaurant-worthy! If you cannot consume beef for religious or health reasons, then chicken broth can be substituted.
4. De-chilling lamb will make it cook more evenly. Cold lamb leg = overcooked on the outside by the time the inside is cooked.
5. Internal temperature of cooked lamb leg:
Roast lamb leg internal cooked temperature
I highly recommend getting a meat thermometer for accuracy – only guaranteed way to get juicy lamb every time!
6. Holding – The lamb leg will stay warm for up to 1 hour, enough time to make duck fat or classic crunchy roast potatoes! The inside of the lamb is still warm even after 3 hours. 
7. Servings: A 2.5 kg/5 lb lamb serves 6 very generously and 8 comfortably. After taking into account the bone (500g/1lb) and meat juices lost during roasting, you should end up with around 1.7kg meat after cooking which is around 280g for 6 people (generous!) or 200g for 8 people. If you slice lamb thinly it will go further!
8. Nutrition per serving, assuming 8 servings and that all the gravy is consumed.

Nutrition

Serving: 275g | Calories: 450cal | Carbohydrates: 3.3g | Protein: 54.6g | Fat: 22.7g | Saturated Fat: 6.1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 16.6g | Cholesterol: 169mg | Sodium: 381mg

Originally published October 2016. I have been very neglectful not updating one of my favourite recipes with sparkling new photos and a recipe video!

I told you – I LOVE roast lamb! See?


Life of Dozer

Original photo from when I first published this recipe in 2016 still holds true, so no need to update:

DOZER. Don’t breathe your stinky dog breath over my friends while they eat!

dozer-roast-lamb-lunch_1

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How to make glazed ham the day before https://www.recipetineats.com/how-to-make-glazed-ham-the-day-before/ https://www.recipetineats.com/how-to-make-glazed-ham-the-day-before/#comments Thu, 08 Dec 2022 04:59:00 +0000 https://www.recipetineats.com/?p=79031 For years, I’ve been making my glazed ham the day before serving then just reheating it on the day of. It comes out 100% perfectly. The glaze is just as good as freshly made and the ham flesh doesn’t dry out at all. Use this make-ahead glazed ham method for either my favourite Maple Glazed... Get the Recipe

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For years, I’ve been making my glazed ham the day before serving then just reheating it on the day of. It comes out 100% perfectly. The glaze is just as good as freshly made and the ham flesh doesn’t dry out at all. Use this make-ahead glazed ham method for either my favourite Maple Glazed Ham or classic Brown Sugar Glazed Ham!

I secretly love the challenge of coming up with menus that have a “wow” factor but has plenty of make-ahead options so I can reduce my workload on the day. Nobody wants to be stuck in the kitchen when they have friends and family over.

But also because I secretly dream of being a poised cooking goddess, Nigella Lawson style, who can swan out gracefully from the kitchen with plate after plate of food without breaking a sweat.

I’m still working on that part.

As for the not being stuck in the kitchen part? I’m getting pretty good at that.

And for Christmas feasting occasions, one of my handiest secret weapons is to make glazed ham the day before!

How to make glazed ham the day before
SATG Christmas Lunch 2019
Glazed ham I made the day before then reheated on the day for a Christmas party I catered for my mother. Not that I’m a professional cater. It’s just when mum asks…., well, we all know she’s not really asking!!

How to make glazed ham the day before

The thing with glazed ham is that it doesn’t actually need to be cooked because it’s already cooked. It’s just about getting that glaze just right!

  1. Bake day before – Make your glazed ham the day before when you’ve got time to baby-sit the ham in the oven, basting and brushing as much as needed for the perfect golden glaze. The only ham glazes I use:
    i) Maple Glazed Ham – my special one, with beautiful woody maple flavour
    ii) Brown Sugar Mustard Glazed Ham – my classic one

  1. Cool for 2 – 3 hours on the counter until you can barely feel warmth when you hover your hand over the surface. However, the inside will still be warm – it’s a sizeable hunk of meat we’re working with here! Don’t leave a hot ham out for much longer than this, for food safety reasons.

  2. Fridge 3 hours uncovered – Then refrigerate the ham uncovered for 3 to 6 hours (still in the pan, with all the pan juices) to allow the inside of the ham to cool right down. You do not want to cover the ham while there’s even a bit of residual warmth on the inside because it will make the ham sweat = compromises the glaze. 😩

How to make glazed ham the day before
Refrigerate overnight then just reheat the next day.
  1. Cover then refrigerate overnight – Cover the ham loosely with a sheet of baking/parchment paper (the glaze won’t stick) then loosely with foil or cling wrap.

  2. Overnight uncovered – Sometimes, if I am pressed for time so the ham hasn’t fully cooled before I head to bed, I just leave the ham uncovered in the fridge overnight. All that fat on the surface of the ham prevents the ham from drying out, and the cut face is so well caramelised that it too is not at any risk of drying out.

    However, I do recommend covering if you have time to fully cool the ham. For precaution and also so you don’t cross contaminate foods with odours. Nobody wants ham flavour infused in their mini cheesecakes!

    Basting Ham with Brown Sugar Ham Glaze
  1. Reheat – Take the ham out of the fridge 2 hours prior. Cover loosely with baking/parchment paper then loosely with foil. Reheat in a 130°C oven for 2 hours or until the centre of the ham registers 60°C/140°F (or a skewer inserted into the middle is hot).

    Add water as needed to prevent pan juices from drying out (we want a syrupy sauce at the end to serve with the ham!) You shouldn’t need oven time with the foil off to re-caramelise the glaze but you can if needed.

  2. Baste, baste, baste as needed for a stunning shiny sticky finish!

  3. Sauce reduction, if needed – If the pan juices are too watery (because you accidentally added too much water when reheating), either return the pan without the ham into the oven to reduce to a syrupy consistency. Or pour it into a saucepan and simmer on the stove.

  4. Serve the ham as you ordinarily do! My default these days is to put it on a wooden board on a bed of green fluff age (whatever’s cheap at the time – kale, watercress, endive are regulars). Wrap paper around the handle, tie with a ribbon, stick a sprig of rosemary in!

Overhead photo of Brown Sugar Ham Glaze for Glazed Ham

Use any ham glaze!

While I’ve referenced the two ham glazes on my website throughout this post (my favourite Maple Glazed Ham and classic Brown Sugar Ham Glaze), these make-ahead steps should work for any glazed ham.

I hope you found this tip useful! I’d love to know what you think if you make your glazed ham ahead of time this year. Tell me in the comments below! – Nagi x

Christmas cooking stressing you out? I get it. See my 6 best tips to make Christmas cooking easier right here!


Life of Dozer

Dozer confirms he can’t tell whether the glazed ham was made today or yesterday.

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Maple Glazed Ham https://www.recipetineats.com/easy-maple-sticky-glazed-ham/ https://www.recipetineats.com/easy-maple-sticky-glazed-ham/#comments Sun, 19 Dec 2021 18:20:00 +0000 https://www.recipetineats.com/?p=6892 Maple Ham Glaze - glazed ham om a platter, ready to be carved. The most incredible baked ham ever!Maple Glazed Ham – this is the ham glaze you use when you want to add a special touch to your festive baked ham, but still keep it easy! The most incredible sticky glaze with the subtle fragrance of maple and hint of holiday spices, this is THE Christmas Ham recipe I make to gift and take to... Get the Recipe

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Maple Glazed Ham – this is the ham glaze you use when you want to add a special touch to your festive baked ham, but still keep it easy! The most incredible sticky glaze with the subtle fragrance of maple and hint of holiday spices, this is THE Christmas Ham recipe I make to gift and take to gatherings year after year.

New to glazed ham? Start here -> How to Make Glazed Ham. No maple syrup or honey? Make this show stopping  Brown Sugar Ham Glaze instead!

Maple Ham Glaze - glazed ham om a platter, ready to be carved. The most incredible baked ham ever!

Maple glazed ham

There is no reason to be daunted by the thought of making a glazed ham! It’s quite straight forward if you have someone to show you how to do it.

(PS That “someone” is me!😂)

Here’s why this Maple Glazed Ham is my go-to centrepiece for holiday menus:

  • It makes the most wonderful, regal centrepiece – huge payoff for effort

  • This maple ham glaze has a touch of special that people love – but it’s 100% dead easy

  • It’s low risk and forgiving to make

  • Prep ahead or make ahead (days and days ahead!)

  • Economical – it’s sliced thinly, a bit goes a long way and leftovers last for ages and ages

A baked ham glistening with a maple brown sugar glaze on a large white platter.

When it comes to ham, there’s nothing to the ham glaze recipe – it’s literally mixing up a few ingredients. The part that’s not an everyday step is peeling the skin off – but don’t worry, the visual steps and recipe video below will guide you through it. It’s not a big deal – the skin WANTS to come off!


What you need for Ham Glaze

Here’s what you need for the Maple Ham Glaze. So few ingredients, it’s magical how it transforms once baked! It’s the combination of the glaze, the caramelization of the fat on the surface of the ham and the salt in the ham itself (which is why I don’t use any salt in the glaze).

What goes in Maple Ham Glaze
  • Maple syrup is what gives this ham glaze a special little touch. No one can put their finger on it – they just know it’s got something magical about it! Sub with honey in a heartbeat! No maple or honey? Make this Brown Sugar Ham Glaze!

  • Brown sugar adds to the caramelised flavour of the glaze;

  • Dijon Mustard is a thickener for the ham glaze AND adds a touch of much needed tang to an otherwise sweet glaze;

  • Cinnamon and all spice for a touch of festive spices;

  • Oranges – for a bit of liquid in the pan that’s more interesting than just using water, plus a touch of extra natural sweetness. You can’t taste the oranges in the end result once cooked. Orange juice has more flavour than just using water which adds to the flavour of the glaze and also the sauce made using the pan drippings;

  • Cloves – optional, for studding! I really can’t taste it so I do it for visual / traditional purposes only. Also, they are a bit impractical – you can’t freely baste as you have to dab around the cloves (otherwise you brush them off) and also you need to remove them before carving. No one wants to bite into a clove!


How to make Glazed Ham

Making Glazed Ham is a 3 step process:

  1. Remove rind (skin) from ham;

  2. Slather with maple glaze then bake for 2 hours, basting with more glaze every 20 to 30 minutes;

  3. Baste loads after removing from oven – the trick for a thick, golden glaze!

1. How to remove rind from ham

If this is the part you’re worried about – don’t be! The skin is thick, sturdy and WANTS to come off – so it peels off with little effort, mostly in one piece!

Here’s how to remove the rind from the ham. The recipe video below also provides a visual tutorial – and if you’re new to making Glazed Ham, start here -> Guide: How to Make Glazed Ham.

Glazed Ham - how to remove rind from ham

2. Baste and bake

This part couldn’t be easier – just brush or spoon the Maple Ham Glaze all over the ham, squeeze over the orange juice then pop it into the oven to bake, spooning over reserved glaze every 20 minutes or so!

How to make Maple Glazed Ham

3. Baste, baste, baste before serving!!

Now here’s the trick for an incredible glaze on your ham – baste LOADS after it comes out of the oven using the syrupy sauce in the baking pan! As that syrupy sauce cools, it will thicken and darken slightly in colour, so as you brush or spoon it over the ham, it creates an incredible thick to-die-for glaze!

Basting Ham with Brown Sugar Ham Glaze
Close up of Maple Glazed Ham ready to be served

Sauce for Ham

While ham itself is seasoned well enough such that it can be eaten plain, nobody ever says no to sauce!

I used to serve ham with sauces like Cranberry Sauce, mustard, caramelised onion jam and even chutney. But then one day it dawned on me – everybody’s favourite part is the glaze. Why not just use the pan drippings which is just the excess glaze that drips down the ham into the pan? Combined with the ham juices and orange juice, it transforms into a fantastic sauce to drizzle over the ham!

Drizzling sauce over Maple Glazed Ham

How to serve ham

Here’s how I serve ham – in fact, how I served it on the weekend at a Christmas Party I catered for my mother! (The only “catering job” I do each year – because I can’t say no to her 😂)

SATG Christmas Lunch 2019
  • Wrap parchment / baking paper around “handle”, and tie with ribbon (practical to hold onto for carving + looks nice);

  • Cover serving platter / board with green fluffage of some kind. Whatever’s good value at the shops on the day;

  • Place ham on the green fluff age and place quartered oranges around it (for colour). In the past, I’ve also used cherries – just depends what’s better value on the day (oranges are usually good value!);

  • Once the glistening ham has been admired enough (yep, I’m really that immature 😂), I start carving!

Carving Maple Glazed Ham

Leftover ham will keep for a week in the fridge or 3 months in the freezer. See How to Store Leftover Ham for directions.

What to make with leftover ham

I always get way more ham than I need (budget 1kg / 2 lb per 6 to 8 people) because Christmas is just as much about leftovers as it is the grand feast on the day! Here are some recipes I deem to be worthy of making using leftover ham!

Recipes worthy of your leftover ham

And don’t forget the bone! SO MUCH FLAVOUR in the bone 🙌. Here are my ham bone recipes:

Ham bone recipes

There’s something so iconic, so sentimental about a shiny, glistening Maple Glazed Ham taking pride of place in the centre of a festive table. It’s completely incomparable to the ham slices slapped between sandwich bread that you get over deli counters. I even know people who hate deli ham who go nuts over Glazed Ham.

Plus, as I said right up front, this is easy, easy, easy! It’s also make ahead or prepare ahead, is fabulous served warm OR at room temperature. Oh – and wait until you see the VIDEO!!! ⬇⬇⬇ – Nagi x

New to Glazed Ham? Start here -> Guide: How to Make Glazed Ham.


Watch how to make it

Maple Ham Glaze - glazed ham om a platter, ready to be carved. The most incredible baked ham ever!
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Maple Glazed Ham

RECIPE VIDEO ABOVE. Baked ham made easy! The most incredible ham glaze ever with a subtle perfurme from maple and festive spices. If using a larger ham, use recipe Scaler (click on Servings and slide). Recipe will serve 30 – 40 with another main and sides, or 25 if it's the only main.
New to Glazed Ham? Start here -> Guide to Making Glazed Ham
Don't have maple syrup? Use honey, or make a classic Brown Sugar Mustard Glazed Ham.
Course Christmas, Easter, Festive, Holiday, Thanskgiving
Cuisine Western
Keyword Christmas Ham, Ham Glaze, maple glazed ham
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 2 hours
Resting 20 minutes
Total Time 2 hours 50 minutes
Servings 30 people
Calories 368cal
Author Nagi | RecipeTin Eats

Ingredients

  • 5 kg / 10 lb leg ham, bone in, skin on (Note 1)
  • 30 Cloves (for studding the ham, optional – mainly for decorative purposes)
  • 2 oranges , cut into quarters (Note 2)
  • 1 cup (250ml) water

Glaze

  • 3/4 cup (185ml) maple syrup (sub honey)
  • 3/4 cup (165g) brown sugar , packed
  • 3 tbsp dijon mustard (can sub American or other plain mustard)
  • 3/4 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp All Spice (or nutmeg)

Instructions

  • Take ham out of fridge 1 hour prior.
  • Preheat oven to 160°C / 320°F (140°C fan). Arrange shelf in lower third so the ham will be sitting in the centre of the oven (rather than in top half of oven).
  • Place the Glaze ingredients in a bowl and mix until combined – use whisk if needed.

Remove ham rind (skin)

  • Run small knife around bone handle, down each side of the ham, and under the rind on the cut face. (See video & photos in post)
  • Slide fingers under the rind on the cut face of the ham, and run them back and forth to loosen while pulling the rind back. Use knife if needed to slice off any residual rind.
  • Lightly cut 2.5cm / 1" diamonds across the fat surface of the ham, about 75% of the way into the fat. Avoid cutting into the meat.
  • Insert a clove in the intersection of the cross of each diamond on the surface (optional).

Glaze and Baking

  • Place the ham in a large baking dish. Prop handle up on edge of pan + scrunched up foil so surface of the ham is level (for more even caramelisation).
    How to make the BEST Glazed Ham - level the surface for even caramelisation
  • Squeeze the juice of 1 orange (4 quarters) over the ham. Then place them along with the remaining orange into the baking dish around the ham.
  • Brush / spoon half the glaze all over the surface and cut face of the ham (don't worry about underside, glaze drips down into pan)
  • Pour the water in the baking dish, then place in the oven.
  • Bake for 1.5 – 2 hrs, basting very generously every 30 minutes with remainig glaze + juices in pan, or until sticky and golden.
  • Use foil patches to protect bits that brown faster than others – press on lightly, caramelisation won't peel off with the foil.
    Foil patches on Brown Sugar Glazed Ham
  • Allow to rest for at least 20 minutes before serving. Baste, baste, baste before serving – as the glaze in the pan cools, it thickens which means it "paints" the ham even better – but be sure to save pan juices for drizzling. 

Serving and presentation tips

  • My favourite sauce: Use pan juices as the sauce – it's loaded with flavour! Pour into a jug and warm so it's pourable. Thin slightly with water if required. Drizzle sparingly as the glaze flavour is intense!
  • Other condiments: Dijon mustard, wholegrain mustard, onion jam, tomato chutney, cranberry sauce.
  • Presentation: Wrap handle with baking paper and ribbon if desired. Remove cloves. Cover serving platter with lots of green fluffage, then place ham on. Surround with more quartered oranges, for colour. Let people admire before carving!
  • Serving: Personal preference whether to serve at room temp or warm, I like either. I also like to drizzle with pan juices – it looks messier but tastes fabulous. Slice thinly! I start slicing at the table, then finish it in the kitchen (towards end when it gets messy!)
  • Leftovers: See list in post for recipe using leftover ham and ham bone!
  • Storing: Will keep for at least a week in the fridge if properly stored using a water-vinegar soaked ham bag or pillowcase. Otherwise freeze – don't forget the bone! See How to Store Glazed Ham for directions.

Notes

1. HAM:
  • Skin (rind) on ham – Make sure you get the ham with the skin on (rind – thick rubbery skin). Between the skin and the ham is a layer of fat which is what makes this ham gorgeously sticky. There are some hams which come with the skin and fat removed. Though you can use this recipe for those hams too, you won’t get the sticky exterior you see in the photo.
  • Half or whole – this recipe can be used for half or whole hams.
  • Larger hams – For larger hams, scale the glaze by using the recipe slider (click on the Servings)
  • Ham quality – Buy the best ham you can afford. The more you pay, the better the quality. However, for an economical option, I can recommend the Woolworths Smoked Ham Leg for $9/kg (I used a half leg). I was very impressed with how great it was for such good value – I’ve used it for several years now. There is an even cheaper one for $6/kg – I bypassed this because it wasn’t smoked and looked a bit pale.
  • Cooked ham – Make sure you get a cooked ready-to-eat ham, not a raw one (also referred to as “gammon”). All ham sold in Australia in supermarkets is ready-to-eat but if you get your ham from the butcher, double check that it’s not raw. If you have a raw ham (gammon), this recipe is not suitable.
2. Oranges – you can’t taste it in the end result, it just adds more flavour into the pan drippings and the glaze the ham. If you really can’t use or stand oranges, use 1/2 cup apple or other fruit juice instead (store bought bottle is fine) and skip putting oranges in baking pan.
3. Make Ahead – Glazed Ham is excellent made ahead, it’s how I do it most of the time!
a) PREPARE THEN BAKE FRESH (100% perfect): Remove skin, cut fat, insert cloves, make glaze and store separately. Then refrigerate until required, then glaze etc  and bake on the day of per recipe.
b) COOK AHEAD (99.9% perfect): Make entirely per recipe, cool. Transfer to non reactive container (do not leave in metal tray), cover sticky surface with baking paper (parchment paper) then the whole ham with foil. Scrape every bit of juice in the pan into a container. Refrigerate both for up to 5 days (longer probably ok, I’ve done 5 days).
To reheat, remove from fridge and bring to room temperature, pour sauce into pan and place ham in pan. Reheat covered loosely with foil in a 160°C/320°F oven for 40 minutes or until a metal skewer inserted into the middle comes out warm. When the inside is warm, remove foil and baste with pan juices, then bake until the surface is sticky and golden –  it shouldn’t take much longer than 10 minutes.
The juices thicken into a jelly when cool so it needs to be reheated (microwave is fine).
DO NOT MICROWAVE!!! It can make the fat diamonds “pop” and you might lose the best part – the golden, sticky surface!
4. How much ham per person – remember, ham is salty, people don’t typically eat giant slabs like steak and you slice it thinly so less goes further.
  • With other main dishes – 6 to 8 people per 1 kg / 2 lb ham (bone in weight). So a 5 kg / 10 lb ham = 30 – 40 people, about 100 – 130g / 3.4 – 4 oz per person.
  • As the only main protein – 5 people per 1 kg / 2 lb ham (bone in weight). So a 5 kg / 10lb ham would serve 25 people, about 150g/5oz meat per person.. 
Note: Ham bone with residual meat weighs anywhere 750g – 1.25 kg (1.5 – 2.5 lb). Assumed 1 kg/2lb for purpose of above.
5. Nutrition per serving, assuming 30 servings and all sauce is consumed (which in reality it won’t be).

Nutrition

Serving: 188g | Calories: 368cal | Carbohydrates: 11g | Protein: 29g | Fat: 22g | Saturated Fat: 8g | Cholesterol: 83mg | Sodium: 1603mg | Potassium: 423mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 10g | Vitamin A: 20IU | Vitamin C: 5mg | Calcium: 27mg | Iron: 1mg

Recipe originally published December 2016. Updated and reviewed every year or so to improve with things like better photos, recipe video, writing edits. Recipe not amended – I wouldn’t dare, people love it as is!

Life of Dozer

Surely you know Dozer well enough by now to know that there’s only one reason why he wouldn’t be gagging over a giant hunk of meat….

….. food on the Christmas tree, of course!!

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