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Honey Glazed Ham Recipe with Brown Sugar Honey Mustard Glaze

Honey glazed spiral ham with a glossy brown sugar honey mustard glaze on a cream serving platter.

You bought the ham. Now the job is to make it juicy, warm all the way through, glossy enough for the table, and calm enough that you are not fighting the oven at the last minute.

That sounds simple until the real questions start: is the ham already cooked, should you cover it, when does the glaze go on, how do you stop spiral slices from drying out, and why does brown sugar burn so fast?

This is the recipe for that moment. It uses a ready-to-eat spiral ham, warms it gently under foil, then finishes it with a brown sugar honey mustard glaze that clings to the slices without scorching. You also get slow cooker notes, pineapple variation, a copycat Honey Baked Ham-style sugar crust, gammon guidance, temperature cues, store-bought comparison, and leftover ideas, so you can adjust the method to the holiday ham you actually bought.

The main idea is easy to remember: warm first, glaze late, caramelize briefly. Covered heat keeps the ham juicy. Uncovered heat makes it beautiful. That is how you get tender slices instead of dry edges and a lacquered finish instead of burnt sugar.

Check Your Ham Label First

Before you start: if your package says fully cooked or ready to eat, you are reheating the ham and glazing it. If it says cook before eating or fresh ham, this glaze can still inspire the flavor, but you need the package’s full cooking method first.

Infographic explaining fully cooked, ready-to-eat, cook-before-eating, and fresh or raw ham label categories.
Start with the package label because “fully cooked,” “ready to eat,” “cook before eating,” and “fresh” all mean different cooking decisions.

That one label check removes most of the stress. A ready-to-eat spiral sliced ham needs gentle reheating, moisture, and late glazing. Raw or cook-before-eating ham needs a different safety plan.

Ready-to-eat ham? Go to the recipe card, or skim the 5-step method first.

Quick Answer: How to Make Honey Glazed Ham

To make honey glazed ham, place a fully cooked spiral ham cut-side down in a roasting pan with a little liquid, cover it with foil, and reheat gently at 275°F / 135°C until nearly warm. Simmer honey, brown sugar, Dijon mustard, butter, vinegar, juice, and spices into a spoon-coating glaze. Brush it over the ham during the final 20 to 30 minutes, then finish uncovered until the edges are amber and caramelized.

For most supermarket hams, you are not cooking raw pork. You are protecting an already cooked centerpiece from drying out while giving it a sweet-tangy finish at the end.

Need exact amounts? Jump to the recipe card. Cooking by weight? Use the cook time chart.

Best Method in 5 Steps

  1. Check the label. Ready-to-eat ham is reheated; cook-before-eating ham needs a different full method.
  2. Warm covered. Place the ham cut-side down with a little liquid and cover tightly with foil.
  3. Simmer the glaze. Cook it until it coats a spoon and falls in a slow ribbon.
  4. Brush late. Add the honey mustard coating during the final 20 to 30 minutes.
  5. Rest and serve. Let the slices settle, then spoon over warm pan juices or extra glaze.
Five-step guide showing label check, covered warming, glaze simmering, late brushing, and resting for honey glazed ham.
This five-step method keeps the process calm: confirm the label, warm gently, thicken the glaze, brush near the finish, and let the ham rest.

That is the whole rhythm: label decides the method, covered heat keeps it juicy, and the final uncovered heat makes it look like a showpiece.

At a Glance

Best hamFully cooked bone-in spiral ham
Best size8 to 10 lb / 3.6 to 4.5 kg
First oven stage275°F / 135°C, covered
Glaze stage400°F / 200°C, uncovered
Glaze timingFinal 20 to 30 minutes
Main glazeHoney, brown sugar, Dijon, butter, vinegar or juice
Internal temperature140°F / 60°C for USDA-inspected fully cooked ham; 165°F / 74°C if repackaged or uncertain
Best cueWarm center, juicy slices, amber edges, glaze that clings

Keep this table open if you are cooking while the oven is busy. It gives you the guardrails; the thermometer and the look of the slices tell you when to stop.

At-a-glance honey glazed ham guide with oven temperature, glaze timing, internal temperature, and visual doneness cues.
Keep this guide nearby while cooking; the clock gives you a range, but the slices and thermometer tell you when to stop.

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What This Honey Glazed Ham Recipe Is Built Around

This recipe is designed around the ham most people bring home for Christmas, Easter, Thanksgiving, or a big Sunday meal: a fully cooked bone-in spiral ham. It is already cooked, already sliced, and already salty-smoky enough to taste good. What it needs is careful reheating and a glaze that tastes sweet, tangy, warm, and balanced.

If you are planning the full table around it, start with one soft, reliable side like garlic mashed potatoes. A sweet glaze always feels better when there is something creamy on the plate to catch the juices.

The method protects the meat early and makes it beautiful at the end. During the first stage, the ham warms covered and cut-side down so the slices stay moist. Then the syrupy finish goes on late, once the center is nearly warm, so the sugar can caramelize without scorching.

  • Ham: fully cooked bone-in spiral ham, 8 to 10 lb / 3.6 to 4.5 kg
  • Glaze: honey, brown sugar, Dijon mustard, butter, vinegar or juice, and warm spices
  • Oven method: low covered warming, then short uncovered caramelizing
  • Main texture goal: juicy slices, amber edges, and a sweet-tangy coating that clings
  • Main failure to avoid: dry spiral slices and burnt sugar

The best finished ham should not look matte or tight. Its slices should be warm and flexible, the edges should be browned but not black, and the pan juices should be spoonable instead of burnt into hard syrup.

Close-up of juicy spiral ham slices with amber glaze between the layers.
Aim for slices that bend easily and hold a little glaze between the layers; stiff, curled edges usually mean the ham has been heated too aggressively.

Is Your Ham Already Cooked?

Most supermarket spiral hams are already cooked. That turns this recipe into a reheating-and-glazing job, not a raw pork cooking project, and that is why gentle heat matters so much.

Temperature note: According to USDA/FSIS ham safety guidance, cooked hams packaged in USDA-inspected plants should be reheated to 140°F / 60°C. Cooked hams repackaged elsewhere should be reheated to 165°F / 74°C. Fresh or raw ham is a different product and needs different cooking instructions.

For “cook before eating” ham, pause here and follow the package cooking directions. If the packaging is unclear, use the higher reheating target and follow the label.

Honey Glazed Ham Recipe Card

Honey Glazed Ham with Brown Sugar Honey Mustard Glaze

A fully cooked spiral ham warmed gently, brushed with brown sugar honey mustard glaze, and finished until the edges are caramelized and the slices stay juicy.

Important: This card is for a fully cooked ham. For “cook before eating” or fresh ham, follow the package’s full cooking method first.

Prep Time15 minutes
Cook Time2 to 3 hours, depending on ham size
Total TimeAbout 2 1/2 to 3 1/4 hours, including resting
Servings14 to 18 servings, depending on sides
CourseMain Course
MethodOven, with slow cooker option

Ingredients

For the Ham

  • 1 fully cooked bone-in spiral ham, 8 to 10 lb / 3.6 to 4.5 kg
  • 1/2 to 1 cup pineapple juice, apple juice, stock, or water, for the roasting pan

For the Brown Sugar Honey Mustard Glaze

  • 3/4 cup honey / 180 ml
  • 1 cup packed light brown sugar / about 200 g
  • 1/3 cup Dijon mustard / 80 ml
  • 4 tbsp unsalted butter / 56 g
  • 2 tbsp apple cider vinegar / 30 ml
  • 1/4 cup pineapple juice or orange juice / 60 ml
  • 1 tsp garlic powder
  • 1/2 tsp paprika or smoked paprika
  • 1/8 to 1/4 tsp ground cloves
  • 1/2 tsp black pepper

Instructions

  1. Remove the ham from the fridge 30 to 60 minutes before baking so it warms more evenly.
  2. Preheat the oven to 275°F / 135°C.
  3. Remove all packaging from the ham, including any plastic cap, button, or disc attached near the bone.
  4. Place the ham cut-side down in a roasting pan or deep baking dish. Add 1/2 to 1 cup pineapple juice, apple juice, stock, or water to the pan.
  5. Cover the pan tightly with foil. Warm the ham for about 12 to 15 minutes per pound, until it is almost heated through.
  6. While the ham warms, add honey, brown sugar, mustard, butter, vinegar, juice, garlic powder, paprika, cloves, and black pepper to a saucepan.
  7. Simmer over medium-low heat for 5 to 10 minutes, stirring often, until the glaze is shiny and slightly syrupy.
  8. When the ham is mostly warm, uncover it. Brush the glaze over the outside and gently between the spiral slices.
  9. Increase the oven temperature to 400°F / 200°C. Bake uncovered for 10 to 15 minutes.
  10. Brush with more glaze and bake another 10 to 15 minutes, until the outside is burnished and caramelized at the edges.
  11. Check the internal temperature in the thickest part of the ham without touching the bone. For fully cooked USDA-inspected ham, reheat to 140°F / 60°C. If the ham was repackaged elsewhere or you are unsure, reheat to 165°F / 74°C.
  12. Rest for 10 to 15 minutes before serving.

Recipe Notes

  • Do not glaze from the beginning. Honey and brown sugar can burn before the center is warm.
  • Do not pour all the glaze into the pan at the start. It can thin out, burn at the edges, or never cling properly.
  • For spiral ham, brush some glaze between the slices near the end, not at the start.
  • Save a little glaze or reduced pan juice for serving with the sliced ham.

Back to top ↑ · Mistakes to avoid · Cook time chart

Which Ham Do You Have?

You do not need to know every butcher term to make this work. The two things that matter most are whether the ham is already cooked and whether it is spiral sliced, because those decide the safety target and how carefully you need to protect the slices.

Ham TypeUse It Here?What to Know
Fully cooked spiral hamBest choiceEasy to serve, but the slices need gentle covered reheating.
Bone-in half hamGreatJuicy, flavorful, and classic for holidays.
Shank-end hamGreatClassic look, easier carving, and usually a strong holiday choice.
Butt-end hamWorksOften meatier, but it can be a little trickier to carve around the bone.
Boneless hamWorksEasier to slice and quicker to heat, but less dramatic on the table.
Pre-glazed hamNot idealThe packet glaze may be very sweet and can clash with this homemade glaze.
Raw or fresh hamNoThis needs a separate cooking method and different timing.
Gammon jointWith notesOften needs simmering or boiling before glazing, depending on the product.
Ham steakDifferent methodGood for a quick glazed meal, but not this full holiday roast.

Once the label and shape are clear, the recipe stops feeling like a guess. You know whether you are reheating, how gently to handle the slices, and when the glaze should go on.

If yours is spiral sliced, check the scoring notes. When oven space is tight, see the slow cooker option.

Comparison guide showing fully cooked spiral ham, bone-in ham, boneless ham, gammon, and raw or fresh ham.
Choose the method based on the ham you bought because spiral, bone-in, boneless, gammon, and raw ham do not all cook the same way.

Do You Need to Score Ham?

You do not need to score a spiral ham. It is already sliced, so the glaze can slip between the layers during the final part of baking. Scoring a spiral ham can make the slices loosen too much and dry faster.

With spiral ham, restraint is your friend. The slices are already open enough for flavor, and extra cutting only gives the oven more edges to dry out.

For an unsliced ham with a fat layer, shallow scoring can help the glaze cling and make the surface look more dramatic. Cut a light diamond pattern through the fat, not deep into the meat. For gammon, score the fat after removing the skin if your recipe or package directions call for it.

Side-by-side guide showing that spiral ham should not be scored, while an unsliced ham can be scored lightly.
Spiral ham is already cut into layers, so extra scoring can create more dry edges; however, an unsliced ham with a fat cap can be scored lightly.

How Much Ham Per Person?

Plan more generously for bone-in holiday ham, especially if you want leftovers. That is not a bad thing here; leftover glazed ham is easy to use in sandwiches, eggs, fried rice, soup, casseroles, and sliders.

For brunch the next morning, diced ham can go straight into ham and cheese quiche, egg muffins, or a make-ahead breakfast casserole with hash browns. That makes a larger ham feel less like excess and more like a head start.

SituationHow Much to Buy
Boneless ham1/3 to 1/2 lb per person
Bone-in ham, normal meal1/2 to 3/4 lb per person
Bone-in spiral ham with leftovers3/4 to 1 lb per person

An 8 lb bone-in ham usually serves about 10 to 14 people generously. A 10 lb ham can serve 14 to 18 people, especially if you have plenty of sides on the table.

Buying extra on purpose? Save the leftover ham ideas for tomorrow’s breakfast, soup, fried rice, or sandwiches.

Ingredients for Honey Glazed Ham

The flavor is simple: salty ham, sweet glaze, enough tang, and gentle warmth from spice. A good brown sugar ham glaze should taste sweet at first, then buttery, sharp, and lightly savory so the meat never feels heavy.

Honey, brown sugar, Dijon mustard, butter, vinegar, juice, and spices arranged for ham glaze.
Each glaze ingredient has a job: honey brings shine, brown sugar adds caramel depth, mustard sharpens the sweetness, and vinegar or juice keeps it balanced.

Ham

Use a fully cooked bone-in spiral ham, ideally 8 to 10 lb / 3.6 to 4.5 kg. Bone-in ham gives a classic Christmas ham or Easter ham look and usually better flavor. Spiral slices make serving easier, but they also need protection from dry oven heat.

Honey

Honey brings shine and helps the coating cling. Mild honey is best here. Strong floral honey can fight the mustard and make the glaze taste perfumed instead of balanced.

Brown Sugar

Brown sugar gives the glaze its caramel depth. Light brown sugar keeps the flavor balanced, while dark brown sugar makes it deeper and more molasses-like.

Dijon Mustard

Dijon mustard cuts through the sweetness and gives the glaze a clean tang. Yellow mustard also works if you want a more familiar honey mustard flavor.

Butter

Butter gives the glaze body and helps it brush smoothly over the ham. It also gives the finish that rounded, glossy look that makes the slices feel generous instead of sticky and flat.

Vinegar, Pineapple Juice, or Orange Juice

Apple cider vinegar makes the glaze tangier. Pineapple juice makes it fruitier and more classic-holiday. Orange juice gives a softer citrus note. Vinegar is the sharp edge; juice is the softer holiday sweetness. A little of both gives the best balance.

That sweet-tangy balance is the same reason a bright side like cranberry sauce with orange juice works so well beside ham. It cuts through the richness instead of adding more heaviness.

Spices

Garlic powder, paprika, black pepper, and a tiny pinch of ground cloves make the glaze warmer and more savory. Go carefully with cloves. A little tastes festive; too much can make the ham taste medicinal.

Equipment You’ll Need

You do not need special gear for this ham, but do not skip the foil or thermometer. Foil protects the slices while the center warms, and the thermometer keeps you from guessing when the outside already looks done.

A roasting pan, saucepan, pastry brush, and cutting board are enough. For the slow cooker method, use a 6 to 7 quart cooker or larger, and make sure the lid closes fully.

How to Make the Brown Sugar Honey Mustard Glaze

The glaze is ready when it looks like it wants to cling to the ham. It should coat the back of a spoon, fall in a slow ribbon, and look glossy and loose in the pan. Avoid taking it so far that it turns watery at one extreme or candy-like at the other. Think sticky syrup, not hard caramel.

  1. Add honey, brown sugar, Dijon mustard, butter, apple cider vinegar, pineapple juice or orange juice, garlic powder, paprika, cloves, and black pepper to a saucepan.
  2. Warm over medium-low heat, stirring often, until the butter melts and the sugar dissolves.
  3. Simmer gently for 5 to 10 minutes, until the mixture looks shiny and lightly syrupy.
  4. Remove from the heat and let it cool for a few minutes before brushing. Slightly cooled glaze clings better than very hot glaze.

A thin-looking mixture may only need a few minutes off the heat. It thickens slightly as it cools. A too-thick glaze only needs a splash of juice, water, or pan liquid to loosen it again.

Brown sugar honey mustard glaze coating a spoon and falling in a slow ribbon into a saucepan.
The glaze is thick enough when it coats the spoon and falls in a slow ribbon, which helps it cling to the ham instead of sliding into the pan.

How Much Glaze Do You Need?

Because spiral ham is sliced, it needs a little more glaze than an unsliced ham. Some should go between the slices, some should coat the outside, and a little extra is useful for serving.

Ham SizeGlaze Needed
4 to 5 lb1 to 1 1/4 cups
8 to 10 lb2 to 2 1/2 cups
10 to 12 lb2 1/2 to 3 cups

The glaze in this recipe is sized for an 8 to 10 lb spiral ham. Smaller hams will not need every spoonful, but extra glaze rarely goes to waste at the table.

Glaze amount sorted? Move to how to bake the ham, then use when to glaze ham near the finish.

How to Bake Honey Glazed Ham

From here, the recipe becomes less about decisions and more about timing. Keep the ham protected first, then let the glaze take over at the end. That separation is what gives you juicy slices and browned edges instead of dry meat and burnt sugar.

Step 1: Take the Chill Off the Ham

Remove the ham from the fridge 30 to 60 minutes before baking. A very cold ham takes longer to heat through, and that can leave the outer slices dry before the center is warm.

Step 2: Set Up the Pan

Preheat the oven to 275°F / 135°C. Remove the packaging and any plastic cap, button, or disc from the ham. Place the ham cut-side down in a roasting pan or deep baking dish. Pour 1/2 to 1 cup pineapple juice, apple juice, stock, or water into the pan.

The pan should look moist but not flooded. A little steam under the foil is good; a hard boil in the bottom of the pan is not.

Spiral ham placed in a roasting pan with a small amount of liquid around the base.
Place the spiral ham cut-side down with a small splash of liquid so the exposed sliced surface stays protected as the ham warms.

Step 3: Cover and Warm Gently

Cover the pan tightly with foil. Warm the ham for about 12 to 15 minutes per pound. For an 8 to 10 lb ham, this usually takes around 1 1/2 to 2 1/2 hours before the final glazing stage, depending on the shape of the ham, how cold it was, and your oven.

Do not rush this quiet part of the recipe. High heat can make the edges tough before the center is ready. If the spiral slices start curling outward or looking matte, the ham is getting too much dry heat.

Hands covering a spiral ham tightly with foil in a roasting pan before reheating.
Foil is your moisture shield during the first stage, especially for spiral ham slices that can dry out faster than a whole unsliced ham.

Step 4: Simmer the Glaze

While the ham warms, make the glaze. Simmer the ingredients until the sugar dissolves and the mixture looks polished and spoon-coating. It should fall in a smooth ribbon, not run like water.

Step 5: Glaze Near the End

When the ham is mostly warm, uncover it. The first rush of steam should smell salty, sweet, buttery, and sharp from the mustard and vinegar. Brush the glaze over the outside and gently between the spiral slices. Increase the oven temperature to 400°F / 200°C and bake uncovered for 10 to 15 minutes.

The edges should start turning amber, not black. Darkening too fast is your cue to reduce the heat or cover those areas loosely with foil.

Pastry brush spreading honey mustard glaze over the outside of a spiral ham in a roasting pan.
Add the glaze near the finish so it has time to turn glossy and caramelized without burning before the center is warm.

Step 6: Glaze Again and Finish

Brush with more glaze and bake for another 10 to 15 minutes. The outside should look burnished, with caramelized edges but no blackened sugar. Check the internal temperature before serving.

Dark outside with a cool center means the oven needs patience, not more drama. Cover the ham loosely, lower the heat, and keep warming gently. A beautiful outside is not worth a cold center.

Close-up of amber caramelized honey glazed ham edges with glossy browned glaze.
Look for amber, glossy edges rather than blackened sugar; that color means the glaze has caramelized without turning bitter.

Step 7: Rest Before Serving

Let the ham rest for 10 to 15 minutes. This makes the slices easier to serve and gives the juices time to settle. The first slice should look shiny and flexible, not dry, tight, or curled at the edges.

When to Glaze Ham

Glaze ham during the final 20 to 30 minutes of baking, not at the start. The ham needs time; the sugar does not. This is the warm-first, glaze-late rule in action.

The best timing: warm the ham covered first, uncover once it is almost hot, brush with glaze, then finish briefly at higher heat until the outside looks lacquered and lightly caramelized.

For darker edges, broil for 1 to 3 minutes at the very end and stay close. A honey glaze can move from beautiful to burnt in seconds.

How to Keep Spiral Ham from Drying Out

Spiral ham is easy to serve because it is already sliced, but those slices are also the reason it dries out. More exposed surface area means more chances for the edges to lose moisture. The fix is not complicated; protect the ham until it is almost ready.

  • Use low heat first. A gentle oven gives the center time to warm before the outer slices dry out.
  • Place the ham cut-side down. This protects the sliced side and keeps the juiciest part from facing direct heat.
  • Cover tightly with foil. Keep the ham covered for most of the reheating time.
  • Add a little liquid to the pan. Pineapple juice, apple juice, stock, or water helps create a moist environment.
  • Brush between slices near the end. This gives flavor without drying the slices from the start.
  • Use a thermometer. Time is useful, but temperature tells you what is actually happening.
  • Rest before serving. A short rest keeps the slices juicier and easier to handle.
Close-up of glaze being brushed gently between the spiral slices of a ham.
For better flavor in every serving, brush a little glaze between the spiral layers near the end without pulling the ham apart too early.

A ham glaze packet can be skipped here. Packet glazes are often very sweet and do not usually give you the same control over tang, thickness, and timing.

Cook Time and Temperature Chart

Use this chart as a starting point, not a promise. Hams are awkward shapes, ovens run differently, and the thermometer gets the final vote. Insert it into the thickest part of the ham without touching the bone.

Ham Cook Time Chart

Ham TypeWeightOven / MethodApprox. TimeTarget Temperature
Fully cooked spiral ham7 to 9 lb / 3.2 to 4.1 kg275°F / 135°C, covered12 to 15 min/lb, plus glazing time140°F / 60°C if USDA-inspected
Fully cooked spiral ham, extra gentle8 to 10 lb / 3.6 to 4.5 kg250°F / 120°C, covered15 to 20 min/lb, plus glazing time140°F / 60°C if USDA-inspected
Boneless fully cooked ham4 to 6 lb / 1.8 to 2.7 kg275°F / 135°C, covered10 to 15 min/lb, plus glazing time140°F / 60°C if USDA-inspected
Boneless fully cooked ham4 to 5 lb / 1.8 to 2.3 kgSlow cooker LOW4 to 6 hours140°F / 60°C
Spiral fully cooked ham, if it fits7 to 10 lb / 3.2 to 4.5 kgSlow cooker LOW4 to 5 hours, check early140°F / 60°C
Raw or fresh hamVariesNot this methodUse a separate recipe145°F / 63°C plus rest

Temperature Targets and Final Check

Smaller or boneless hams may be ready sooner, especially if they sat out before baking. If the edges look ready before the center is warm, cover the ham again and slow down. A calm finish beats a rushed one.

When packaging is unclear, use the safer 165°F / 74°C target and let the label guide you.

Instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of a honey glazed ham with 140°F and 165°F temperature guidance.
Check the thickest part without touching bone, since a fully cooked ham and an uncertain or repackaged ham do not use the same final temperature target.

Common Honey Glazed Ham Mistakes to Avoid

  • Glazing from the start: the sugar can burn before the center warms.
  • Using high heat the whole time: the outer slices can turn dry and tight.
  • Forgetting the plastic cap or disc: remove all packaging pieces before baking.
  • Heating spiral ham uncovered too long: sliced ham loses moisture quickly.
  • Trusting only the clock: time estimates help, but temperature confirms.
  • Letting slow cooker ham sit on warm for hours: it can dry out after reaching temperature.
  • Pouring all the glaze into the pan: it thins out instead of clinging to the ham.

None of these mistakes are dramatic if you catch them early. Cover, lower the heat, reduce the glaze, or brush on a fresh layer near the end.

Infographic listing honey glazed ham mistakes including glazing too early, overheating, skipping the thermometer, and leaving spiral ham uncovered.
The biggest ham mistakes are simple to avoid: protect the slices, save the glaze for the finish, use moderate heat, and verify the temperature.

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Slow Cooker Honey Glazed Ham

When the oven is already full of casseroles, rolls, or dessert, the slow cooker can take over the ham. It is best for boneless hams or smaller hams that fit easily under the lid. Spiral ham can work, but it needs earlier checking because the slices are more delicate.

The lid matters more than people think. A ham wedged in so tightly that the lid does not seal will heat unevenly, and the top can dry out before the center is ready.

Think of the slow cooker as the moist, convenient option. The oven gives a better roasted finish. A quick broiler finish after slow cooking gives you the best compromise.

Slow Cooker Method

  1. Use a slow cooker large enough for the ham to fit with the lid fully closed.
  2. Place the ham cut-side down or on its side, depending on shape.
  3. Add the glaze and 1/4 to 1/2 cup liquid.
  4. Cook on LOW just until warmed through. Avoid HIGH, which can make the edges tough.
  5. Baste once or twice if possible.
  6. Check the internal temperature. Aim for 140°F / 60°C for fully cooked ham, or 165°F / 74°C if unsure.
  7. For a caramelized finish, transfer the ham to a broiler-safe pan, brush with more glaze, and broil briefly.

Every slow cooker varies. A 4 to 5 lb boneless ham usually takes about 4 to 6 hours on LOW. Larger spiral hams may take about 4 to 5 hours if they fit properly, but shape matters as much as weight.

Honey glazed spiral ham sitting inside a slow cooker with glossy brown sugar honey mustard glaze.
Use the slow cooker when the oven is full, but make sure the ham fits comfortably instead of being forced under the lid.

Slow cooker tip: stop once the ham is warmed through. Leaving it on warm for hours can undo all the moisture you protected.

Using the slow cooker to free the oven? Check the serving ideas next, or revisit the temperature chart before slicing.

Once the main method is clear, the next sections are only there if they match the ham or holiday table you want. Keep the regular glaze for the cleanest result, add the sugar crust for drama, use pineapple for a retro-holiday version, or check the gammon notes if that is the joint you bought.

Copycat Honey Baked Ham-Style Sugar Crust

This sugar-crust finish is optional. The main glaze does not need it, but it is useful when you want a sweeter, crackly, store-bought-style finish. Use a light hand and stay close to the oven or torch, because this finish is less forgiving than the regular glaze.

Mix this sugar crust in a small bowl:

  • 1/2 cup granulated sugar
  • 1/2 tsp cinnamon
  • 1/4 tsp nutmeg
  • 1/8 tsp ground cloves
  • 1/4 tsp paprika
  • 1/4 tsp onion powder

After the ham is warmed and glazed, sprinkle a light layer of the sugar mixture over the outside. Broil for 1 to 3 minutes or use a kitchen torch until the sugar melts and caramelizes. Watch constantly. The difference between a caramelized crust and burnt sugar can be only a few seconds.

Use this finish when you want the ham to feel a little more dramatic than everyday dinner. For a simpler family meal, the regular glaze is enough.

Homemade Honey Glazed Ham vs Store-Bought Ham

There is nothing wrong with buying the ham already done, especially when the rest of the table is enough work. The reason to glaze it yourself is control: you can serve it warm, keep the sweetness balanced, make the mustard sharper, and stop while the slices are still juicy instead of just accepting whatever came in the packet.

OptionBest ForTradeoff
Store-bought holiday hamConvenience and less day-of workLess control over sweetness, warmth, and texture
Homemade glazed hamBetter balance and fresher finishNeeds timing and thermometer checks
Copycat-style sugar crustShowpiece presentationSweeter and easier to burn if unattended

Homemade also helps when you do not want the glaze packet that came with the ham. Many packet glazes are mostly sweet. This brown sugar honey mustard glaze is still rich and festive, but the mustard, vinegar, pepper, and optional fruit juice keep it from tasting flat.

Pineapple Honey Glazed Ham Variation

Pineapple makes the ham feel a little brighter and more old-school holiday — the kind of version that looks right with glossy rings, cherries, and a sweet-salty pan sauce.

For pineapple honey glazed ham, use pineapple juice as the liquid in the glaze and in the roasting pan. Add pineapple rings during the final part of baking so they stay bright and do not overcook. Because pineapple adds sweetness, keep the mustard and vinegar in the glaze so the ham still tastes balanced.

Pineapple honey glazed ham with pineapple rings, cherries, glossy glaze, and caramelized edges.
Pineapple gives the glaze a brighter, old-school holiday flavor; meanwhile, mustard and vinegar keep the sweetness from tasting flat.

If you are leaning into the sweeter holiday side of the menu, sweet potato casserole fits that same mood, especially when the ham glaze has enough mustard or vinegar to keep the plate from becoming too sweet.

Honey Glazed Gammon Notes

Gammon can absolutely take this honey mustard glaze, but the starting point is different. Many UK-style gammon joints need simmering or boiling first, then the glaze goes on after the meat is cooked and the fat is ready to brown.

Once the gammon is cooked according to its package directions, remove the skin if needed, score the fat, brush with honey mustard glaze, and roast until caramelized and browned. The same honey, mustard, and brown sugar flavor works beautifully; the initial cooking method is the part that changes.

Flavor Variations

Once the base glaze works, the variations are mostly mood changes. Pineapple feels retro and holiday-bright, orange feels softer, maple feels deeper, and hot honey makes the ham more playful without changing the method.

VariationHow to Adjust the Glaze
Honey mustard hamUse Dijon or yellow mustard generously for a tangier glaze.
Pineapple honey hamUse pineapple juice in the glaze and roasting pan.
Orange honey hamUse orange juice and a little orange zest.
Maple honey hamReplace part of the honey with maple syrup.
Bourbon honey hamAdd a splash of bourbon to the glaze and simmer well.
Hot honey hamAdd cayenne, chili flakes, or hot honey.
Clove-spiced hamAdd a tiny pinch of ground cloves. Use restraint.
Mustard-free glazeAdd extra vinegar or citrus so the glaze does not taste too sweet.
Brown-sugar-free glazeUse more honey or maple syrup, but expect a softer, less caramel-like finish.

The sweeter you take the glaze, the more the plate needs contrast. Add something green, sharp, creamy, or crisp so every bite does not land in the same sweet-rich place.

Troubleshooting Honey Glazed Ham

Most ham problems are fixable if you catch them early. Usually, one of three things happened: the ham got too hot, the glaze went on too early, or the glaze was too thin or too thick.

ProblemWhy It HappenedFix
Ham is dryToo hot, uncovered too long, or overheatedUse lower heat, cover tightly, add a little liquid, and stop at the right temperature.
Thin glazeIt was not simmered long enoughSimmer longer, or use 1 tsp cornstarch mixed with 1 tbsp water.
Over-thickened glazeIt reduced too farAdd pineapple juice, orange juice, water, or pan juices a spoonful at a time.
Burned glazeIt was added too early or broiled too longGlaze near the end and broil only briefly while watching closely.
Sliding glazeThe glaze is too hot or too thinLet it cool slightly so it thickens before brushing.
Cold centerThe ham was too cold or not warmed long enoughCover again and continue warming gently until the center reaches temperature.
Sweet-heavy glazeNot enough acid or mustardAdd more mustard, vinegar, or citrus to the glaze.
Salty hamThe ham itself is saltyServe with mild sides and avoid very salty pan liquid.
Watery slow cooker glazeCondensation diluted the glazeReduce the liquid in a saucepan before serving.

Fix the cause rather than fighting the whole recipe. Dry ham needs gentler heat. Burnt glaze needs later glazing. Thin glaze needs more simmering or a quick reduction.

What to Serve with Honey Glazed Ham

Honey glazed ham is sweet, salty, smoky, and rich, so it pairs best with sides that are creamy, green, buttery, or lightly acidic. A good ham plate needs contrast: something creamy to catch the juices, something green to cut the sweetness, and something bread-like for the extra glaze.

For comfort, add hashbrown casserole or green bean casserole. To add contrast, bring in something tart, crisp, or lightly dressed. Mac and cheese, dinner rolls, roasted vegetables, and simple salads all work well beside the sweet glaze.

  • Scalloped potatoes
  • Dinner rolls
  • Roasted carrots
  • Brussels sprouts
  • Simple salad
  • Baked beans
  • Roasted sweet potatoes
  • Green beans

For a colder buffet-style plate, a creamy potato salad works better than another hot, sweet side. On a holiday table, aim for one creamy side, one green vegetable, one bread or roll, and one bright or tangy contrast.

Plate of honey glazed ham slices with mashed potatoes, green beans, cranberry sauce, and a dinner roll.
Build the plate with contrast: something creamy, something green, something bright, and bread or rolls to catch the extra glaze.

Make Ahead, Storage, and Reheating

Holiday ham is easier when the little decisions are handled early. The glaze can be made ahead, the pan can be ready, and the ham can come out of the fridge before the oven gets busy.

Simple Holiday Timing Plan

WhenWhat to Do
2 to 3 days beforeMake the glaze and refrigerate it.
1 day beforeCheck the ham label, roasting pan, foil, thermometer, and serving platter.
30 to 60 minutes before bakingTake the ham out of the fridge so it warms more evenly.
Final 20 to 30 minutesBrush on the glaze and caramelize briefly.
Before servingRest for 10 to 15 minutes, then spoon over warm glaze or pan juices.

Can You Make the Glaze Ahead?

Yes. Make the glaze 2 to 3 days ahead and refrigerate it in a covered container. Warm it gently before brushing so it becomes smooth and pourable again.

Can You Make Honey Glazed Ham Ahead?

You can warm the ham ahead if needed, but the best texture comes from glazing close to serving. Reheat covered with a splash of liquid, then refresh with warm glaze before serving.

How to Store Leftover Ham

Store leftover ham in an airtight container in the refrigerator for 3 to 4 days. Keep slices covered so they do not dry out. For a broader guide to how long cooked foods keep in the fridge or freezer, use the FoodSafety.gov cold food storage chart.

Can You Freeze Honey Glazed Ham?

Yes. Freeze sliced ham in portions, wrapped tightly, for up to 2 months for best quality. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator before reheating.

How to Reheat Leftover Ham

Reheat slices gently with a splash of water, stock, or juice. Use a covered skillet, low oven, or microwave in short bursts. Avoid reheating the whole ham repeatedly, because that dries it out.

For a next-day dinner that does not feel like reheated holiday leftovers, chop the ham into a pot of bean stew or use the smoky pieces anywhere you would normally want a salty, savory boost.

Leftover Honey Glazed Ham Ideas

Leftover honey glazed ham is one of the best reasons to make a larger ham. The next-day meals are part of the reward, not just a way to use things up. A few slices can become breakfast, sandwiches, soup, fried rice, or a quick dinner before anyone feels like they are eating the same holiday plate again.

  • Ham and cheese sliders
  • Ham sandwiches with mustard
  • Breakfast omelets
  • Ham fried rice
  • Ham and potato hash
  • Mac and cheese with chopped ham
  • Ham and bean soup
  • Split pea soup with ham bone
  • Ham quiche
  • Ham and cheese breakfast casserole

If your ham has a bone, save it before clearing the platter. The bone adds deep flavor to soups, beans, and broths. If you like that smoky beans-and-meat direction, red beans and rice is another useful comfort-food path for ham pieces or a ham bone.

Four-panel leftovers guide showing ham sandwiches, a ham omelet, ham soup with beans, and ham fried rice.
Leftover honey glazed ham can turn into sandwiches, breakfast, soup, beans, fried rice, or hash, so the next-day meals feel planned instead of patched together.

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By this point, the big decisions are handled: label, heat, glaze timing, serving, and leftovers. The quick answers below are for the small questions that tend to come up while the oven is already on.

FAQ

Is honey glazed ham already cooked?

Most supermarket spiral hams are fully cooked, so you are usually reheating and glazing them rather than cooking from raw. The package still gets the final word. “Cook before eating” or “fresh ham” needs different cooking instructions.

Do you cover ham while baking?

Yes. Keep the ham covered while it reheats so the slices stay moist, then uncover it only for the final glaze stage. That short uncovered finish gives you the caramelized outside without drying out the center.

When should I glaze ham?

Glaze during the final 20 to 30 minutes of baking. The ham needs time to warm gently; the sugar only needs a short finish to turn glossy and caramelized.

What temperature should honey glazed ham reach?

For a fully cooked USDA-inspected ham, use 140°F / 60°C. If the ham was repackaged elsewhere, or you are unsure about it, use 165°F / 74°C. Raw or fresh ham needs a different cooking method.

Do I need to score spiral ham?

No. Spiral ham is already sliced, so scoring usually adds more exposed edges without adding much benefit. Unsliced ham with a fat layer can be scored lightly so the glaze clings better.

Can I use the glaze packet that came with the ham?

You can, but homemade glaze gives you more control. Packet glazes are often very sweet and may not have enough mustard, vinegar, or spice to balance the ham. This brown sugar honey mustard glaze gives you a fresher, less flat finish.

Can I make honey glazed ham the day before?

The glaze can be made ahead, and the ham can be warmed ahead if needed. For the best texture, save the final glaze stage for close to serving, then refresh the slices with warm pan juices or extra glaze.

Can I make honey glazed ham in a slow cooker?

Yes, as long as the ham fits with the lid fully closed. Cook on LOW just until warmed through, then finish under the broiler if you want a more roasted, caramelized outside.

What is the difference between ham and gammon?

In many UK recipes, gammon is a cured pork joint that often needs cooking before it is glazed. A fully cooked American spiral ham is usually already cooked and only needs reheating. The glaze can work for both, but the starting method may be different.

Why did my ham glaze burn?

Your glaze was probably added too early or exposed to high heat for too long. Honey and brown sugar caramelize quickly, so glaze near the end and broil only briefly while watching closely.

How do I keep honey glazed ham moist?

Use gentle heat, place the ham cut-side down, add a little liquid to the pan, and keep it covered for most of the reheating time. The goal is to warm it through, not roast it hard twice.

Before You Serve It

Honey glazed ham looks dramatic on the table, but it rewards calm cooking more than fuss. Keep it covered while it warms, wait until the end to glaze, and let the sweet, tangy smell tell everyone dinner is close. When the slices are warm, the edges are burnished, and the glaze is clinging in all the right places, the ham is ready for the table.

Once the ham has done the heavy lifting, dessert can stay simple. A tender apple cake fits the cozy holiday mood, while key lime pie gives the meal a colder, brighter finish.

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