It’s a mosaic of home-cooked ham and fresh parsley, held together with a savoury jelly. The secret is to have just enough jelly to hold the meat and herbs together. The savoury jelly was originally made by cooking veal bones and trotters with the ham, which produced good gelatinous stock that set when chilled. Nowadays we can use gelatine to set the stock in which the ham is cooked.
Ham hocks are delicious and are cheap as chips – buy them at your local butcher. They make a good flavoursome stock and aren’t too salty. However, to check the saltiness, cut off a little piece of the raw ham and cook in boiling water until tender, then taste. If it’s too salty, soak the ham hocks in several changes of cold water, overnight.
Serve with homemade piccalilli, spelt bread, small salad and a very dry white wine.

2 x 1.2kg/2lb 12oz unsmoked ham hocks, on the bone
A bouquet garni (2 bay leaves, few sprigs of thyme, 2 sprigs of parsley and few optional sprigs of tarragon tied together)
1 carrot, chopped into large chunks
2 sticks of celery, chopped into large chunks
1 onion, peeled and halved
1 tsp coriander seeds
1 tsp black peppercorns
4 shallots, chopped
4 tbsp white wine vinegar
4 gelatine leaves
2 tbsp small capers, rinsed and drained
50g/2oz gherkins, rinsed and chopped
A generous handful of parsley, finely chopped
salt and freshly ground black pepper
1) Put the ham into a large saucepan along with the bouquet garni, carrot, celery, onion, coriander seeds, peppercorns, shallots and white wine vinegar. Cover with cold water and bring to the boil. Reduce the heat, cover and simmer for 3 hours until very tender. Remove the ham from the pan and set aside. Allow the stock to cool.
2) Meanwhile, line a 900g loaf tin. Lay out a large sheet of cling film on a work surface, then another sheet slightly overlapping the first, to give you 1 very large layer. Repeat with 2 more layers, smoothing out each one, so you have triple thickness. Wet the inside of the loaf tin and fit in the cling film, leaving the excess overhanging.
3) Once the ham is cold, tear the meat off the bone into strips and discard as much fat as you can. There’s no need to chop the meat. Put into a large bowl. Take the leaves off the parsley stalks and roughly chop the leaves. Quarter the cornichons lengthways, then roughly chop the capers. Mix it all together and spoon into the lined loaf tin.
4) Soak the gelatine in plenty of cold water for about 5 minutes. Measure 300ml cooking stock and put into a saucepan and warm through. Take the gelatine out of the water and squeeze out the excess water. Drop into the cooking stock, off the heat, and stir until melted. Leave to cool.
5) Transfer the cooled stock back into the measuring jug and carefully pour into the loaf tin. Carefully wrap the overhanging cling film over itself to seal in the terrine.
6) Cut a piece of card large enough to just cover the terrine, then wrap in foil & then wrap the loaf tin tightly in more cling film. Put in the fridge to set overnight. The terrine will keep for up to 6 days in the fridge.
Visit Lucinda's food blog here.
You are not logged in. Register or login have your comments appear more quickly! Registering is free and easy.
Post a comment
Comments
Be the first to commment.