_Things Got Out Of Ham


Serves: 5

Ingredients

Directions:

Back in the 1970s, American banks enticed folks to open accounts by offering free toasters, transistor radios, eight-track tapes, and other irresistible treasures. Weber was a small company back then and I thought if we could convince banks to give away grills, we could grow our business fast. My first lead was a bank in St. Charles, Illinois, then a small, bucolic town along the Fox River. Today it's a western Chicago suburb regularly choked with traffic.

I managed to wrangle an appointment with none other than the president of the St. Charles National Bank, Mr. De Forest. Now, Mr. D was a rather intimidating pinstriped fellow--you know, the type who might glance over your loan application and negative net worth and, with an icy gaze over his half-glasses, unleash a resounding "No." Fortunately, I wasn't asking for a loan. I had almost made the sale when he asked, "And how do you plan to deliver customers, cash in hand, to the doorstep of my bank?"

To this day I don't know why I said, "We'll offer a free barbecued ham sandwich to anyone who comes by to meet the friendly staff." Mr. D loved the idea! We decided that Weber would do the grilling and the bank's executives would serve the sandwiches.

I had three weeks to wonder what had possessed me to make such a crazy offer and to come up with a plan. Meanwhile, newspaper ads broke and suddenly all the local media wanted to cover the event. I began to get nervous. If there was too little ham, we would have a mad mob. Too much ham would mean the bank's employees would be eating leftovers for weeks--not the best PR for Weber.

Well, on Sandwich Day I hauled eight of our 36-inch Ranch® kettles (which can cook five whole hams at a time), fifty 18-pound hams, and 500 pounds of charcoal to the bank. A local bakery, though they thought I was nuts, agreed to deliver a half-­truckload of freshly baked rye bread.

I fired up the grills at 7:00 a.m. and showed the bank executives, decked out in aprons and chef hats, how to make sandwiches while pitching the services of their bank with a smile. The first sandwiches were to be served at 11:00 a.m.

I suspected we were in trouble when we had to call the St. Charles police for traffic control just after 9:00 a.m. We started furiously carving ham at 10:30 a.m. As I pulled a cooked ham off a grill, I put another one in its place and loaded more charcoal into the grill. We carved as fast as we could. Bank tellers formed a conga line of platter bearers, and the bank executives became covered in mustard.

By noon the police were getting nervous. Parking was full for a mile radius around the town and they had never even witnessed, let alone handled, gridlock. I was nervous, too. A half-truck of rye and 900 pounds of ham were going fast!

But Mr. D was having a ball talking to customers, cutting up with the local disk jockey, and handing out account applications. By 1:00 p.m. (closing time back then), they had opened more than 300 accounts. Mr. D decided the bank would remain open until everyone received a sandwich. At my urging, he also sent some tellers to buy every ham they could find in St. Charles. We called the bakery for more rye bread. Reinforcements from the Weber factory showed up with more charcoal, sharp knives, and new cutting boards. For the first time that day, I began to believe there wouldn't be a riot.

The tellers came back with whole hams, rolled hams, and armloads of mustard jars, leaving empty grocery shelves in their wake. The second bread delivery made it through the police line just in time, and I kept stoking the kettles. By 3:00 p.m. the line was down to mere hundreds and the bank had opened 500 accounts. We kept carving and the exhausted, mustard-covered bankers kept dispensing sandwiches.

Shortly after 5:00 p.m., our team of shell-shocked grillers and servers gave away the last free sandwich, broke out some beer, and started tallying up the day's outcome. Some 1900 pounds of ham, 950 pounds of charcoal, one truckload of rye, and God knows how much mustard later, the bank had more than 650 new customers. I had hoped to sell 40 or 50 grills to the St. Charles National Bank, but the order came to almost three truckloads.

If you ever need a recipe and a shopping list for feeding a small town ham sandwiches, check out my recipe on the right. And if you're a bank executive and need some tips on pleasing customers, it's been my experience that people take much more kindly to mustard-speckled aprons and a smile than an icy, pinstriped gaze over half-glasses. A free lunch doesn't hurt, either.

From Weber’s Big Book of Grilling. Copyright © 2001 Weber-Stephen Products Co. All rights reserved. First published by Chronicle Books LLC, San Francisco, California.

This _Things Got Out Of Ham recipe is from the Weber's Big Book of Grilling Cookbook. Download this Cookbook today.


More Recipes from the Weber's Big Book of Grilling Cookbook:
_A Bout With A Trout
_A Firehouse Turkey Tale
_A First-Class Luau
_A Griller's Pork Rib Glossary
_A Griller's Steak Glossary
_America's Main Squeeze: In Praise of Ketchup
_And The Good News Is...
_Beef On The Grill: Some Kind Of Wonderful
_Beyond Veggies: How To Grill For A Vegetarian
_Boning A Whole Chicken Or A Turkey Leg
_Boosting The Flavor Before You Grill
_Bratwurst Brouhaha
_Burgers On The Grill: Memories Of An Old Flame
_Butterflying Beef Short Ribs: Special Technique
_Check Your Char-O-Scope: Free Your Inner Griller - Scoring
_Chicken On The Grill: Something For Everyone
_Condiment Extraordinaire: The Glory Of Mustard
_Cooking Times For Whole Turkeys
_Cutting Chicken Into Serving Pieces
_Cutting Poultry For The Grill: Special Technique
_Dessert On The Grill: Sweet Endings
_Duck, Duck, Goose: Which Sauce For Which Dish?
_Eggplant On The Grill: Don't Be Bitter
_Extreme Grilling
_Fish On The Grill: Fun With Fins
_Fishy Choices: Fresh or Frozen?
_Flavor Enhancers
_Frenching A Rack Of Lamb
_Fruit On The Grill: Strawberries, Peaches, And Pears, Oh My!
_Game On The Grill: Call Of The Wild
_Granulated Garlic: Little Grains Of Wonder
_Great Grilled Garlic: Mom's Own Comfort Food
_Grill-Roasted Peppers: Hot Little Numbers
_Grilling Guide: Beef
_Grilling Guide: Fish & Seafood
_Grilling Guide: Fruit
_Grilling Guide: Game
_Grilling Guide: Lamb
_Grilling Guide: Pork
_Grilling Guide: Poultry
_Grilling Guide: Vegetables
_Grilling Tips: From Flatfish To Shellfish
_How To Get Great Grill Marks
_How To Make A Great Salad
_Lamb On The Grill: International Star
_Maintenance Tips
_Making Marinades: Strictly A Matter Of Taste
_Making Salmon Roll-Ups: Advanced Technique
_Matching Starters with Entrees 1: Beautiful Beginnings
_Matching Starters with Entrees 2: Beautiful Beginnings
_Meat Substitutes: Quick & Easy
_Oils And Vinegars: Seductive Chemistry
_Pork On The Grill: From Squeal To Meal
_Pork Ribs On The Grill: Smoke 'Em If You Got 'Em
_Poultry On The Grill: Bird On A Fire
_Preparing A Rib Roast
_Preparing Duck Breasts For The Grill
_Prime Rib On The Grill: Beef Royalty
_Quotes
_Removing The Membrane From Pork Ribs
_Removing The Silver Skin From Pork Tenderloin
_Resting And Salting Beef: Treat Me Right
_Sage Advice About Grilling Scallops
_Salmon On The Grill: Timing Is Everything
_Seared Ahi: The Exception To The Cardinal Rule
_Seasoned Salts: Quick Perks
_Sectioning Citrus Fruits: Slices of Sunshine
_Serving Up Turkey: A Flawless Feast
_Spices And Herbs
_Starters On The Grill: Okay, Put Down The Cheese Ball And No One Will Get Hurt
_Steak On The Grill: Sizzling Sensations
_Sweet Nostalgia: Gourmet S'Mores
_The Art Of Salad: Know Your Greens...And Reds And Whites
_The Noble Onion: Tearful Homage
_The Proper Way To Eat Barbecued Pork Ribs
_The Skinny On Skinning A Fillet
_Things Got Out Of Ham
_Tips For Great Grilled Pork
_Trussing: All Tied Up
_Turkey On The Grill: Have You Tried It Yet?
_Vegetable Grilling Chart
_Vegetables On The Grill: Bumper Crop Of Flavor
_Weber's Big Book Of Grilling: Forward
_Weber's Big Book Of Grilling: Introduction
_Weights And Measures: Basic Equivalents
_Weights And Measures: Converting To Metric
_Weights And Measures: Handy Substitutes
_Weights And Measures: Temperature Conversions
_What Your Burger Toppings Say About You
_Wield That Brush Like A Pro
_Year-Round Heroes: Corn & Squash




"I must say this is the best recipe software I have ever owned."
-Rob

"Your DVO cookbook software saves me time and money!"
-Mary Ann

"Call it nutrition software, meal planning software, cooking software, recipe manager, or whatever you want. It is the software I use to stay healthy!"
-David

"Your software is the best recipe organizer and menu planner out there!"
-Toni

"Thank you so very much for creating such a wonderful cooking recipe program. I think this is the best recipe program there is!"
-Sarah

"I saw lots of recipe software for PC computers but I was having a hard time finding really good mac recipe software. I'm so glad I discovered Cook'n! It's so nice to have all my recipes in a computer recipe organizer. Cook'n has saved me so much time with meal planning and the recipe nutrition calculator is amazing!!!
-Jill

My favorite is the Cook'n Recipe App.
-Tom