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Jake’s Easter Ham with Honey-Herb Glaze (The Carving Tradition)

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Easter Ham Glaze Recipe

Every Easter, Jake carves the ham. Jake doesn’t cook. Not really. He can work a grill and he makes a mean pot of camp coffee, but the kitchen is my territory. Except the Easter ham. That’s his.

It started our second Easter as a married couple. I’d made everything — the sides, the rolls, the deviled eggs, the dessert — and Jake walked in and said, “I’ll carve it.” Like he was volunteering for something important. He got our one good knife, rolled up his sleeves, and carved the thinnest, most uneven slices you’ve ever seen. He was so proud of himself.

Twelve Easters later, he’s actually gotten good at it. Last Easter, Wyatt asked if he could help. Jake showed him how to hold the knife, how to keep your fingers curled back, how to let the blade do the work. Wyatt carved two slices. They were uneven. Jake told him they were perfect. Clara had claimed the glaze — she measured the honey, counted the herb sprigs, and brushed in careful strokes like she was painting a masterpiece.

The glaze is simple — honey and brown sugar with Dijon mustard, fresh rosemary and thyme, and a splash of apple cider vinegar to cut through the sweetness. The ham does most of the work. But the tradition around it? That’s everything.

How to Make Jake’s Easter Ham with Honey-Herb Glaze

Start with a bone-in spiral-cut ham. It’s already cooked — all you’re doing is warming it through and adding the glaze. Place it cut-side down in a roasting pan, tent it with foil, and bake at 325 degrees for about 15 minutes per pound. An 8-pound ham takes roughly two hours.

Make the glaze while the ham warms. Stir together honey, brown sugar, Dijon mustard, apple cider vinegar, melted butter, and chopped fresh rosemary and thyme in a small saucepan. Heat it gently until the sugar dissolves and everything is smooth and fragrant. That’s it — no complicated reduction, no candy thermometer.

Glaze in the last 30 minutes. Pull back the foil, brush the ham generously with the glaze, and return it to the oven uncovered. Brush again every ten minutes — you want multiple layers of that sticky, herby sweetness building up on the outside. The edges of the spiral slices get caramelized and slightly crispy, and that’s the best part. Let the ham rest for 15 minutes before Jake gets his knife.

Trying to plan an Easter feast without breaking the bank? My Easter Menu on a Budget guide shows you how to serve a beautiful spread for a fraction of the cost.

Jake's Easter Ham with Honey-Herb Glaze

Easy honey-herb Easter ham glaze with rosemary, thyme, and Dijon mustard. A simple glaze that makes a spiral-cut ham the centerpiece of Easter dinner.
Course Main Course
Cuisine American
Keyword easter, glaze, ham
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 2 hours 10 minutes
Total Time 2 hours 45 minutes
Servings 12 servings
Author Maggie

Ingredients

For the Honey-Herb Glaze

  • 1/2 cup honey
  • 1/3 cup packed brown sugar
  • 2 tablespoons Dijon mustard
  • 2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar
  • 2 tablespoons butter melted
  • 1 tablespoon fresh rosemary finely chopped
  • 2 teaspoons fresh thyme leaves chopped
  • 3 cloves garlic minced
  • 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
  • pinch cayenne pepper optional

For the Ham

  • 1 bone-in spiral-cut ham 8-10 pounds, fully cooked
  • 1/2 cup water or apple juice for bottom of pan

Instructions

  1. Remove ham from fridge 1 hour before cooking. Preheat oven to 325°F. Line roasting pan with foil, add water/apple juice to bottom.
  2. Place ham cut-side down in pan, cover tightly with foil. Bake 12-15 minutes per pound (about 1 hour 40 minutes for 8-lb ham) until 140°F internal temp.
  3. While ham bakes, make glaze: combine honey, brown sugar, Dijon, vinegar, and butter in a saucepan over medium heat. Stir until smooth. Add herbs, garlic, pepper, cloves, and cayenne. Simmer 2 minutes.
  4. 30 minutes before ham is done, remove foil. Brush half the glaze over ham. Return to oven uncovered 15 minutes.
  5. Brush remaining glaze over ham. Bake another 15 minutes until deep amber and sticky. Let rest 15-20 minutes before carving. Serve with pan drippings.

Recipe Notes

Spiral-cut ham lets the glaze seep between every layer. Don't skip the apple cider vinegar — it balances the sweetness. Pan drippings are liquid gold for drizzling. Use a meat thermometer — 140°F, not higher.

Looking for a different glaze? My Brown Sugar Glazed Ham is Nana Ruth’s simpler version, and Jake’s Bourbon Maple Glazed Ham brings the sweetness up a notch. And if you end up with leftovers (you will), my Day-After-Easter Ham & Asparagus Quiche is the best thing that can happen to leftover ham.

Common Questions

How big of a ham do I need?
Plan for about 3/4 pound per person if you want leftovers (and you want leftovers — they make amazing sandwiches and white bean soup). For our family of five plus a guest or two, an 8-10 pound ham is perfect.
Can I use dried herbs instead of fresh?
You can, but fresh herbs make a real difference in the glaze. Use about one-third the amount if substituting dried. The fresh rosemary and thyme smell incredible as they heat with the honey.
Do I need to buy a spiral-cut ham?
It’s the easiest option — already sliced so it’s simple to serve. A whole un-cut ham works too, but you’ll need to score the surface in a diamond pattern before glazing so the flavor can penetrate. Jake prefers spiral-cut because it’s easier to carve (and he doesn’t need the extra challenge).
What do I do with the ham bone?
Don’t throw it away — Nana Ruth would never forgive you. Save it for white bean and ham soup or split pea soup. The bone has a whole other meal in it. Wrap it and refrigerate for up to five days, or freeze for up to three months.
Can I make the glaze ahead of time?
Yes — make it up to three days ahead and refrigerate. Warm it gently on the stove before brushing on the ham. It thickens as it cools, so warming it makes it easier to brush evenly.

What I Use for This Recipe

A couple things from my kitchen that make this one easier.

T-fal Nonstick Frying Pan
T-fal Nonstick Frying Pan(~$15)

Pancakes slide right off. Eggs never stick. The pan the kids are actually allowed to use.

OXO Good Grips 12-Inch Tongs
OXO Good Grips 12-Inch Tongs(~$10)

Jake refuses to grill without these. Good grip, locks closed for the drawer.

ThermoPro Instant-Read Thermometer
ThermoPro Instant-Read Thermometer(~$12)

Stop guessing. Best twelve dollars I ever spent on my kitchen.

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