Stuffed ham

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Stuffed ham
Maryland stuffed ham
Alternative namesMaryland stuffed ham
Place of originUnited States of America
Region or stateMaryland
Associated cuisineSouthern
Main ingredientsCorned ham, greens

Stuffed ham is a variety of ham in which cabbage, kale, onions, spices and seasonings are chopped and mixed, then stuffed into deep slits slashed in a whole corned or smoked ham.[1] The ham is covered with extra stuffing, wrapped in a cloth to hold everything together, and then boiled until the meat and greens are fully cooked. Stuffed ham is believed to have originated in Southern Maryland, specifically in St. Mary's County, and remains popular in that region to this day.[2] Often used as a Christmas ham, this preparation has been popular for at least 200 years. Typically the ham has a distinctively spicy flavor due to added seasoning. Recipes vary widely, since they are traditionally passed down from one family member to another.

Salmonella vector[edit]

In 1997, improperly prepared stuffed ham served at the Our Lady of the Wayside Catholic Church fund-raising dinner in Chaptico, Maryland was responsible for one of the largest multi-drug resistant Salmonella Heidelberg outbreaks in Maryland which sickened 750 people and caused two deaths.[3][4][5] The CDC documented the incident in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases.[6]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Alumnae (1959). Treasured Recipes of Old St. Mary's County. St. Mary's Academy.
  2. ^ Stern, Jane (Jun 4, 2009). 500 Things to Eat Before It's Too Late: and the Very Best Places to Eat Them. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 107. ISBN 9780547416441.
  3. ^ Jensen, Peter; Thompson, Neal (7 November 1997), "Illnesses blamed on church dinner exceed 600 cases Fatal heart attack of Baltimore woman could be linked to it", Baltimore Sun, retrieved 12 Nov 2017
  4. ^ Buote, Brenda (26 November 1997), "Culprit at church dinner was ham Markets in St. Mary's won't be penalized, health officials say", Baltimore Sun, retrieved 12 Nov 2017
  5. ^ Shields, Todd; Goldstein, Avram (7 November 1997), "Stuffed Ham Suspected in Illness", Washington Post, retrieved 12 Nov 2017
  6. ^ Varma, JK; Greene, KD (2005), "Hospitalization and Antimicrobial Resistance in Salmonella Outbreaks, 1984–2002", Emerging Infectious Diseases, 11 (6): 943–946, doi:10.3201/eid1106.041231, PMC 3367611, PMID 15963293

Further reading[edit]