try painting it with a catilist such as peroxide, or a catilist used in two part epoxy, whatever you try be careful you are working with reactive chemicals do small controled test first watching for excessive heat and toxic vapour.
Glaze
Obviously after it has defrosted. Depending on how you intend to serve it - not whole if it is already cooked. If sliced, then a coating of glaze would be sufficient while you reheated the gammon. If attempting to reheat whole, then the glaze should be applied about 15 minutes before the end of the cooking process, but be aware the ham will be dry.
Icing, frosting, or perhaps for some cakes a glaze.
Most glazes should be air dried. However if you are using a glaze on ceramics, it will dry when it is placed in the kiln to be fired.
The gloss is fired on glaze. In short, it's a very thin coating of glass. You might try using a very fine emery cloth to dull the glaze, but the results won't be what you wish. For a temporary fix, try simply painting over the glaze with acrylic wash. It will dull the finish. After all, you might change your mind later.
To install glass in a window is "to glaze". By analogy, it also means to cover a food in a candied coating, e.g., glazed ham.
You can buy it on Krylon.com, or check your local hardware store.
The glass in a frame. Commonly the window of a house or the glaze.The word Glaze means any extra surface coating on a thing .....Like doughnut gets a soft sugar glaze ... while a clay pot gets a liquid glaze heated into a Hard glaze.....or the runner had a glaze of sweat on his face...... um Oh yes... glass too is known as glaze so too is the putty used to seal it into its frame....I can only assume they get this odd usage of the word because the glass is an extra coating on the building
Hair Glaze is commanly used to make ur hair to look dry and feel shiny. The main concept behind a glaze is to avoid combing for more than a day. You should apply the glaze once u wakes up from bed.
Hair Glaze is commanly used to make ur hair to look dry and feel shiny. The main concept behind a glaze is to avoid combing for more than a day. You should apply the glaze once u wakes up from bed.
I think you mean the word 'underglaze' which is whatever is under the glaze on a pot. So you can speak of 'underglaze colours' or 'underglaze painting' and so on. Because glaze is the final coating on a pot, just about everything else is 'underglaze' work. There is also 'On-glaze' painting, which what it says ---I bet you guessed that one o.k. !
The answer to your question depends on what you want your final product to be. If you intend on having a gold or silver glaze on your ceramics, you have to go through several steps. First, the ceramic piece has to reach the correct initial temperature to ensure the clay has set into the correct density to accept the first coating of glaze. After fired, you will then be able to paint on the next coat, whether it be another coat of glaze or your silver or gold glaze. You can have several layers of glaze on an item, but there could be chemical interactions depending on colors and composition of your item.