Ad

For the roll

  • 2 smoked ham hock
    (about 3kg in total)
  • 2 carrots
    roughly chopped
  • 1 onion
    roughly chopped
  • 1 leek
    top, if you have it, roughly chopped (optional)
  • 2 celery sticks
    roughly chopped
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 1 thyme sprig
  • 2 cloves
  • 1 allspice
    berry
  • 1 tbsp apple cider vinegar
    plus a splash
  • small pack parsley
    leaves chopped, stalks reserved
  • 80g shelled and toasted pistachio

To serve

  • 2 Granny Smiths
    apples
  • 1 shallot
    thinly sliced into rings
  • 2 tbsp apple cider vinegar
  • 40g bag pork scratchings
    lightly crushed
  • 1 bag of watercress

For the dressing

Nutrition: per serving (10)

  • kcal400
  • fat27g
  • saturates7g
  • carbs2g
  • sugars1g
  • fibre1g
  • protein37g
  • salt4.8g
Ad

Method

  • step 1

    To make the roll, put the ham hocks in a large pan and add all the ingredients, except the chopped parsley (do add the stalks) and pistachios. Cover with cold water, bring to the boil and simmer gently for 3-4 hrs until the meat is very tender.

  • step 2

    Remove the hocks from the liquid, reserving 100ml (save the rest to make a split pea or chunky vegetable soup), and leave them until just cool enough to handle – the hotter the ham, the easier it is to shred. If you have a pair of clean washing-up or food preparation gloves, it's easier to handle the hocks while they are hot. Take the meat off the bone and shred into another bowl, discarding any skin, large bits of fat, gristle or cartilage. Add the pistachios, chopped parsley and 100ml ham stock in with the ham, and add a drizzle more vinegar. Squish everything through your fingers to mix it a bit more.

  • step 3

    Lay overlapping pieces of cling film on a clean work surface the size of an A3 piece of paper. Pile the mixture along the bottom length of the cling film, leaving about 10cm free on each side. Roll the ham in the cling film into a large, tight sausage shape, piercing with a skewer once or twice to release any air, then put in the fridge overnight. Can be made up to four days ahead.

  • step 4

    To make the dressing, tip the mustard into a bowl and slowly whisk in the vinegar, then the oil, to make an emulsion. Tip into a squeezy bottle if you have one. Using a small melon baller, scoop out balls of the apples, then tip into a bowl with the vinegar, add the shallot rings and leave for a few mins to pickle.

  • step 5

    To serve, carve the ham roll on the diagonal, still in the cling film, into slices about 2cm thick. Peel off the cling film, put the slices on plates and brush with a little rapeseed oil if you want to make it shiny. Build a thin line of watercress along the other side of the plate and arrange three apple balls and some shallot rings along the watercress, then scatter with chunks of scratchings. Dot the plate with blobs of dressing and serve the rest on the side.

Recipe from Good Food magazine, November 2016

Ad

Comments, questions and tips (6)

Rate this recipe

What is your star rating out of 5?

Choose the type of message you'd like to post

Choose the type of message you'd like to post

Overall rating

A star rating of 4.2 out of 5.6 ratings

phillmcrack

Seriously underwhelmed how can a business as profound as BBC good food make such a atroashios recipe. family hated it but great meal

overdale20

question

would it be necessary to soak hocks first if smoked?

CassieBest avatar
CassieBest

Hi Overdale20,

Boiling the hocks will remove lots of the salt so there's no need to soak them first. Cassie (Senior Food Editor, BBC Good Food)

overdale20

question

would it be necessary to soak hocks if smoked?

aj65

question

Can the ham hocks be cooked the day before assembly or is it better to make up when warm so the terrine binds better?Want to do in individual moulds. Any tips please?

goodfoodteam avatar
goodfoodteam

Thanks for your question. We'd suggest making them up to the end of step 3 even if you are doing them in individual moulds - this will really help the shape to set.

Joanne Allan avatar

Joanne Allan

A star rating of 5 out of 5.

I made this for Christmas starter 2 yrs ago and it was brilliant. I made it early and froze it and it was still excellent. Will be making it again this year.

phillmcrack

bloody heck joanne hope fam found it v good :) take care and die

Ad
Ad
Ad