Henry
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« : April 02, 2007, 06:55:04 AM » |
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Hi All,
Back when I was a youngster, living on Fairfield Ridge, I remember coming home from the one room school I attended, believe it may have been around this time of year and having this wonderful smell drift over the whole area. I knew then, Dad had started to smoke the Easter Ham. We used to get molasses in wooden barrels for the cows. I remember Dad used to take a pail of it ever so often and spread it in front of the cows and they used to lap it up in no time flat. Well, once the barrel was empty, dad would remove the lid, clean it and then make a couple of holes in the bottom. He would insert a wire through the holes and hang the hams inside, turn the barrell upside down and place it on some stones to lift it just a bit and use corn cobs to smoke the Easter Ham. I don't know how long he did this for, but remember him after a certain period of time taking a small sharp knife and cutting a small wedge and tasting it to see if it was smoked enough. All the time this ham was smoking, that wonderful smell just permeated the whole ridge. Now my memory is very vague as to just how he did this, but I do know he used corn cobs, never saw any flames, just smoke and it took quite a while.
I thought I would find something on the Internet, but was unable to locate anything. Although I doubt anyone does this anymore, must be someone that remembers more details than I do.
In later years, we used to bring the hams and bacon down to the local store where McKenzie's used to do it for us. Don't remember the cost to do it, but am sure it wasn't much.
Also, while I'm on the subject, my wife likes blood pudding/blood sausage, which we used to be able to buy at our local stores and super markets. My mother and my wife's mother used to make it, however, I don't eat it. Checked down at Hannafords the other day and they told me that Mckenzie's used to be their supplier, but they no longer make it.
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