I'm a microwave cook wanting to get fancy for a Christmas dinner tomorrow. I'm having trouble putting together a schedule for what to put in a regular gas oven at what temp, when, for a 4pm dinner. The menu I put together:
- Ham that bakes at 300 degrees for 1-1/2 to 2 hours (an 8-10 pound ham)
- Baked ham that glazes at 400 degrees, for 15 minutes.
- The baked & pineapple-glazed ham does then sit, but for only 15 minutes.
- Sweet potato wedges, roasted at 425 degrees for 25 minutes.
- "Soft" veggies, also roasted at 425, but for 10-15 minutes.
- Salad that doesn't need the oven at all.
I've taken gloomy note of the advice here that I should NOT try to glaze the ham alongside steamy veggies, no matter how tempting it looks on paper. So do I bake the ham & glaze it, and then deal with the sweet potatoes & veggies while letting the ham sit for half an hour?
To make things worse, I only have two cookie sheets, and I suspect that potatoes & veggies for six are going to take up three. Can I do the potatoes very early, and then repurpose their cookie sheet at the end? (But I'd have to heat them back up…) Can I put one of the dishes in a cake pan or Pyrex casserole dish? Will there be enough real estate in my normal-sized oven if I do so?
Should I just break down and cook the sweet potatoes in the microwave? Then I can do so and oven-roast the veggies while the ham sits.
UPDATE: I tried parboiling the sweet potatoes before roasting them, and it went blooie: I just plain boiled them instead. So we'll have mashed sweet potatoes and plenty of room for the veggies… Fingers crossed on those.
Best Answer
I would attack it in the following manner:
You can eliminate a lot of stress if you set up your dishes (empty) on the table or buffet tonight (or early in the day). I will even go as far as putting little sticky notes to remind myself which dish goes where. This allows me to make sure that everything is going to fit. But it also allows me to set out the serving cutlery, make sure that the pieces do not need a last minute scrub or polish, and to note whether I have managed to forget something.
Don't worry, a Ham is one of the all time easiest things to make!
note: I added a couple of minutes to allow for heat loss while opening and closing the oven door.