Maple Glazed Ham Recipe | Damn Delicious (2024)

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Maple Glazed Ham Ingredients Instructions Did you make this recipe? Post navigation Want to Save this Recipe for Later? Leave a Reply 16 comments Erica — December 28, 2023 @ 3:41 PM Reply Made this for a holiday dinner and everyone devoured it! I didn’t have dijon mustard so I used honey mustard. I also used 3 whole cloves instead of ground cloves. I think I will do 4 cloves next time. No orange zest. Lydia — November 28, 2021 @ 6:30 AM Reply I personally thought the orange zest was a bit weird tasting. I feel it would have been better with a bit of orange juice instead. Maybe I will try that next time. Brigitte — October 17, 2021 @ 7:21 AM Reply Amazing ham, I will do it again, I served it with garlic rosemary mashed potato (Ricardo) and raisin sauce (a family staple- old old recipe!). Tonya — April 9, 2021 @ 4:34 AM Reply I made this ham for Easter and it was delicious! I followed the directions per a reviewer to wrap the ham in foil and it was perfectly moist and delicious. (I was worried a spiral sliced ham would dry out.) I unwrapped it for the last 20 minutes or so to carmelize the glaze. It looked beautiful! The glaze was delicious with the bit of orange zest. Everyone loved it. JB — December 26, 2020 @ 8:22 AM Reply I used a pre-cooked Hickory smoked 4.4lb ham with no bone and placed it in foil with the open flatside down in a pyrex dish. I placed the heavy foil in the dish first, shaped and sprayed lightly with a coat of canola oil, placed the ham on its cut-flat side down, added a quarter cup of red wine with quartered oranges around the ham and placed gloves in many of the crosscuts. I also kept the ham wrapped the whole time except the last 15-20 minutes and cranked the heat to 350, so that it would caramelize.I think I may have had it in the oven for a little too long as the narrow end came out just a touch dry. In essence the ham looked like a dome and was really easy to baste from top to bottom…a glob on the top would just ooze down the sides. If you use this method with a larger ham, please use a larger pyrex or other that will accept the rise in juices you’ll end up having. I used a 2.2 qt and it was perfect size for the 4.4lb. The foil made it easy at the end to puncture high and lift one end to drain and capture all the juices in the pyrex for more dipping sauce. This all said, it would be great if there was a little more guidance on weight, time and foil. When I do this over again, I think I will close the foil for the first 60-90 minutes while still basting every 30 mins with closed/open foil and keep the temp at 300, but then raise to 350 in the last 10 mins for carameling. The maple mixture is AWESOME and @Candace you don’t even get a mustard taste….you should just try it. The tang of the dijon and sweetness of the maple is legit as they say…no mustard taste on my buds … just a tangy orange flavored sweetness…YUM ! I gave four stars for the recipe guidance, but this is a 5-star dish. @Beth, if your D likes cilantro, use that instead or whatever herb is the fancy, is what I say. For this dish, we had planned on having a romaine salad and the sides were mashed potatoes (my choice) and a granny apple-cranberry stuffing (I know lots of starch) with maple glazed carrots. I pre-made the stuffing the day before but it took the longest to heat back up and brown the top to complete the meal, so we had to skip the salad and wait for the stuffing to heat up while we started the dinner without them. Two ovens or better planning would have been nice, but I digress. Bottomline…THIS RECIPE IS A WINNER ! Amy Pluhar — December 31, 2021 @ 6:15 AM Reply How do I get the carbs for this recipe? I have a diabetic son, I know the ham & seasonings have zero carbs however some other ingredients do have carbs so I’m wondering if it’s possible to get these #s? ERene — December 9, 2020 @ 7:15 PM Reply Cut side down first – glazed? And then do you flip it over and glaze? And then put it in the over? Or do you keep it flipped over and put in the oven? I ask because your wording is different than your pictures. Tina — December 4, 2020 @ 11:34 AM Reply I’m confused about basting the ham cut side down? Don’t you want the glaze on the top of the slices? Sheryl Massey — April 13, 2020 @ 10:49 AM Reply Very tasty! Good recipe! Jhon — November 25, 2020 @ 12:17 PM Reply Thank you for your comments. Michelle — December 29, 2019 @ 9:23 AM Reply Cut side down? Is that right?Btw, love your recipes and your puppers. My daughter and I love the food, but the Butters & Cartman posts are just as great! Jana @ Damn Delicious — December 29, 2019 @ 11:29 AM Reply Correct! 🙂 J — December 26, 2019 @ 4:32 AM Reply Amazing !! Candace — December 19, 2019 @ 3:28 PM Reply Looks fantastic and super easy. I’m not a huge fan of mustard (crazy I know). Is there anything I can substitute for it or can I leave it out? By the way, I have been meaning to post and tell you I love your recipes. I have several on a regular rotation and love trying new recipes of yours as they are always delicious. Oh, and welcome to Chicago! I hope you’re surviving the cold weather. Summer makes it all worth it. Casey — December 25, 2023 @ 7:39 AM Reply Candace – I am the exacts ame way as you. I hate mustard and all other condiments. You’ll have to trust a stranger on the internet, but i promise you don’t taste it at all once you mix with everything else! Beth — December 19, 2019 @ 12:04 PM Reply This sounds amazing, but my daughter hates the flavor of rosemary. Can I leave it out, or will that alter the flavor profile too much? Maybe just a smidgen of dried rosemary? FAQs References

4.67 stars (6 ratings)

16 Comments »

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Made with the most incredible maple, brown sugar glaze. With just a few ingredients, this will be a hit with everyone!

Maple Glazed Ham Recipe | Damn Delicious (1)

Guys, Christmas is seriously in just 1 week!

I know we say this all the time but seriously, where did all the time go? Didn’t we just celebrate Thanksgiving? I’m still working through all my leftover hambone soupby the way. It’s legit the best.

And by the time I finish this batch, I’ll have another hambone to use up with this recipe!

Maple Glazed Ham Recipe | Damn Delicious (2)

Now this recipe is a super easy, classic baked holiday ham with the most incredible maple, brown sugar glaze. All you need is 6 ingredients for this glaze: maple syrup, brown sugar, Dijon, orange zest, fresh rosemary and black pepper.

That’s it. It’s a super short ingredient list.

Just make sure your ham is sitting at room temperature before baking. From there, you can brush that beautiful ham with 1/4 cup of the glaze, and then you can baste that bad boy every 30 minutes, yielding that super sticky, super perfect glazy heaven.

Maple Glazed Ham Recipe | Damn Delicious (3)

Maple Glazed Ham Recipe | Damn Delicious (4)

Maple Glazed Ham

Yield: 12 servings

Prep: 20 minutes minutes

Cook: 2 hours hours 30 minutes minutes

Total: 2 hours hours 50 minutes minutes

Maple Glazed Ham Recipe | Damn Delicious (5)

Made with the most incredible maple, brown sugar glaze. With just a few ingredients, this will be a hit with everyone!

4.7 stars (6 ratings)

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Ingredients

  • ¾ cup maple syrup
  • ½ cup brown sugar
  • 3 tablespoons Dijon mustard
  • 1 tablespoon orange zest
  • 1 tablespoon chopped fresh rosemary leaves
  • 1 tablespoon coarsely ground black pepper
  • 1 (8-lb) bone-in, fully cooked, spiral-cut ham, at room temperature

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 300 degrees F. Line a 9 x 13 baking dish with foil and lightly oil or coat with nonstick spray.

  • In a medium bowl, whisk together maple syrup, brown sugar, Dijon, orange zest, rosemary and pepper.

  • Place ham, cut side down, in the prepared baking dish. Brush evenly with 1/4 cup maple syrup mixture.

  • Place into oven, brushing with remaining maple syrup mixture every 30 minutes, until cooked through, reaching an internal temperature of 140 degrees F, about 2 hours 30 minutes. Let stand 5 minutes.

  • Serve immediately.

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Tag @damn_delicious on Instagram and hashtag it #damndelicious!

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posted on December 17, 2019under christmas, easter, entree, thanksgiving
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16 comments
  1. Erica December 28, 2023 @ 3:41 PM Reply

    Made this for a holiday dinner and everyone devoured it! I didn’t have dijon mustard so I used honey mustard. I also used 3 whole cloves instead of ground cloves. I think I will do 4 cloves next time. No orange zest.

  2. Lydia November 28, 2021 @ 6:30 AM Reply

    I personally thought the orange zest was a bit weird tasting. I feel it would have been better with a bit of orange juice instead. Maybe I will try that next time.

  3. Brigitte October 17, 2021 @ 7:21 AM Reply

    Amazing ham, I will do it again, I served it with garlic rosemary mashed potato (Ricardo) and raisin sauce (a family staple- old old recipe!).

  4. Tonya April 9, 2021 @ 4:34 AM Reply

    I made this ham for Easter and it was delicious! I followed the directions per a reviewer to wrap the ham in foil and it was perfectly moist and delicious. (I was worried a spiral sliced ham would dry out.) I unwrapped it for the last 20 minutes or so to carmelize the glaze. It looked beautiful! The glaze was delicious with the bit of orange zest. Everyone loved it.

  5. JB December 26, 2020 @ 8:22 AM Reply

    I used a pre-cooked Hickory smoked 4.4lb ham with no bone and placed it in foil with the open flatside down in a pyrex dish. I placed the heavy foil in the dish first, shaped and sprayed lightly with a coat of canola oil, placed the ham on its cut-flat side down, added a quarter cup of red wine with quartered oranges around the ham and placed gloves in many of the crosscuts. I also kept the ham wrapped the whole time except the last 15-20 minutes and cranked the heat to 350, so that it would caramelize.

    I think I may have had it in the oven for a little too long as the narrow end came out just a touch dry.
    In essence the ham looked like a dome and was really easy to baste from top to bottom…a glob on the top would just ooze down the sides. If you use this method with a larger ham, please use a larger pyrex or other that will accept the rise in juices you’ll end up having. I used a 2.2 qt and it was perfect size for the 4.4lb. The foil made it easy at the end to puncture high and lift one end to drain and capture all the juices in the pyrex for more dipping sauce.
    This all said, it would be great if there was a little more guidance on weight, time and foil. When I do this over again, I think I will close the foil for the first 60-90 minutes while still basting every 30 mins with closed/open foil and keep the temp at 300, but then raise to 350 in the last 10 mins for carameling. The maple mixture is AWESOME and @Candace you don’t even get a mustard taste….you should just try it. The tang of the dijon and sweetness of the maple is legit as they say…no mustard taste on my buds … just a tangy orange flavored sweetness…YUM ! I gave four stars for the recipe guidance, but this is a 5-star dish. @Beth, if your D likes cilantro, use that instead or whatever herb is the fancy, is what I say. For this dish, we had planned on having a romaine salad and the sides were mashed potatoes (my choice) and a granny apple-cranberry stuffing (I know lots of starch) with maple glazed carrots. I pre-made the stuffing the day before but it took the longest to heat back up and brown the top to complete the meal, so we had to skip the salad and wait for the stuffing to heat up while we started the dinner without them. Two ovens or better planning would have been nice, but I digress. Bottomline…THIS RECIPE IS A WINNER !

    • Amy Pluhar December 31, 2021 @ 6:15 AM Reply

      How do I get the carbs for this recipe? I have a diabetic son, I know the ham & seasonings have zero carbs however some other ingredients do have carbs so I’m wondering if it’s possible to get these #s?

  6. ERene December 9, 2020 @ 7:15 PM Reply

    Cut side down first – glazed? And then do you flip it over and glaze? And then put it in the over? Or do you keep it flipped over and put in the oven? I ask because your wording is different than your pictures.

  7. Tina December 4, 2020 @ 11:34 AM Reply

    I’m confused about basting the ham cut side down? Don’t you want the glaze on the top of the slices?

  8. Sheryl Massey April 13, 2020 @ 10:49 AM Reply

    Very tasty! Good recipe!

    • Jhon November 25, 2020 @ 12:17 PM Reply

      Thank you for your comments.

  9. Michelle December 29, 2019 @ 9:23 AM Reply

    Cut side down? Is that right?

    Btw, love your recipes and your puppers. My daughter and I love the food, but the Butters & Cartman posts are just as great!

  10. J December 26, 2019 @ 4:32 AM Reply

    Amazing !!

  11. Candace December 19, 2019 @ 3:28 PM Reply

    Looks fantastic and super easy. I’m not a huge fan of mustard (crazy I know). Is there anything I can substitute for it or can I leave it out?

    By the way, I have been meaning to post and tell you I love your recipes. I have several on a regular rotation and love trying new recipes of yours as they are always delicious. Oh, and welcome to Chicago! I hope you’re surviving the cold weather. Summer makes it all worth it.

    • Casey December 25, 2023 @ 7:39 AM Reply

      Candace – I am the exacts ame way as you. I hate mustard and all other condiments. You’ll have to trust a stranger on the internet, but i promise you don’t taste it at all once you mix with everything else!

  12. Beth December 19, 2019 @ 12:04 PM Reply

    This sounds amazing, but my daughter hates the flavor of rosemary. Can I leave it out, or will that alter the flavor profile too much? Maybe just a smidgen of dried rosemary?

Maple Glazed Ham Recipe | Damn Delicious (2024)

FAQs

Do you put glaze on ham before or after cooking? ›

The glaze should not be applied until the final hour to 30 minutes, in order to avoid burning the sugars. What you're going to do with the glaze ingredients is just combine most of them into a paste, and then apply it to the ham. After that, the heat in your oven will take care of everything.

How to make ham glaze Gordon Ramsay? ›

To make the glaze, put the sugar, Madeira, sherry vinegar and honey into a pan and stir over a low heat. Bring to the boil, lower the heat and simmer for 3–4 minutes, until you have a glossy dark syrup. Do not leave unattended, as it can easily boil over.

How do you keep a glazed ham moist? ›

Cover the ham to keep it moist! I've found that just tenting the ham with foil does the job. Keep it tented until you brush on the glaze. Once glaze in on the ham, remove the foil so the glaze has a chance to get all caramelized and yummy.

What is the secret to good ham? ›

Cook it low and slow.

This ensures that the meat doesn't dry out as your ham spends at least a couple hours in the oven. The ideal temperature to cook at is 325°, and for a bone-in half ham it will take 20 to 25 minutes per pound to cook at that low of a temperature.

Should I cover a glazed ham in the oven? ›

If you don't cover your ham while cooking it will quickly dry out. Instead: Put some aluminum foil over your ham while it's cooking. It is recommended that the ham is covered for at least half of the cooking process and only removed during the last half when you glaze it.

How do you get glaze to stick to ham? ›

The glazing part is no different to brushing and basting anything that's marinated!
  1. Pour / brush the glaze onto the ham. ...
  2. Baste every 20 minutes as it bakes with reserved Glaze and pan juices.
  3. Initially, the glaze won't stick to the fat but the longer it's in the oven, the thicker the glaze gets.
Dec 9, 2019

Do you cook a ham at 325 or 350? ›

Heat oven to 325°F. Remove all packaging materials. Place ham, cut/flat side down, on rack in shallow roasting pan; cover tightly with aluminum foil. Heat approximately 18 to 23 minutes per pound until heated through.

What is the best way to cook a precooked ham? ›

Place the ham, cut-side-down, on heavy-duty aluminum foil and wrap the ham thoroughly. Or use an oven roasting bag; follow instructions on the bag for preparation. Bake in a preheated 325F oven for 10-14 minutes per pound, or until a meat thermometer registers 135F.

What can I put on my ham so it doesn't dry out? ›

How do you bake a ham without drying it out? Spiral cut hams should be covered with aluminum foil to help retain moisture when re heating. You could also place a foil pan with water underneath the ham to create some steam inside the oven to keep everything moist.

How can I make my ham taste better? ›

Peach preserves, hot pepper jelly, and maple syrup work as sweet bases for glazes that add sheen as well as distinct flavor. Tasty additions such as aromatics, herbs, and spices switch up a traditional ham and make it truly memorable.

What is the best cooking method for ham? ›

Roast in a 350 degrees F oven until the thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the ham registers 130 degrees F. Increase the oven temperature during the last 45 minutes of cook time to 375 degrees and glaze several times. The ham is done when it's cooked to 140 degrees F.

What cut of ham has the best flavor? ›

The shank end (or leg portion) sports that classic ham profile, so it's a good choice for a picture-perfect table. The meat tends to be leaner and it has one long bone, which makes carving easier. The butt end (the top half of the ham) has more tender, fattier meat, lending a richer flavor.

Do you glaze before or after cooking? ›

Pro Tips for Making a Glaze

When cooking with a glaze, your meat or vegetables need to be almost fully cooked through before applying the glaze. Apply it at the very end of cooking process, as prolonged cooking can cause the high sugar content to burn and become bitter.

How do you heat and glaze a precooked ham? ›

Add water to the bottom of the pan and cover the whole thing tightly with foil. Bake at 325F for 16-20 minutes per pound, until a meat thermometer registers 135F. Unwrap the ham and apply the glaze; increase the heat to 400F and bake for 15-20 minutes longer until the glaze is burnished.

At what temp do you put the glaze on a smoked ham? ›

If you're short on time, store bought will work fine too. I use a disposable aluminum pan to smoke my ham to keep the mess to a minimum. Be sure to place the cut side of the ham face down in the pan as shown in the photos. Once the ham temperature registers around 135 degrees F, start preparing your glaze.

What happens if you glaze a ham too early? ›

When should I glaze a ham? The ham should be glazed towards the end of the cook. Whether you are baking the ham in the oven or doing a twice smoked ham on the smoker, the glaze should be added at the end. If you glaze your ham too early, the sugars could burn from the heat.

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