T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2368.1 | Add Garlic too | DLNVAX::JOHN | | Wed Jan 30 1991 11:40 | 6 |
|
Sliver several garlic buds and stuff the slivers into the deep slits
along with the rosemary & pepper. Garlic,lemon & rosemary seem
to really compliment lamb meat.
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2368.2 | DON'T FORGET THE MINT SAUCE!!!! | SHRFAC::HULSWIT | | Thu Mar 28 1991 00:01 | 2 |
| Lamb should not be served without mint sauce. Cross & Blackwell
makes the best and it is available in most supermarkets. Its delicous..
|
2368.3 | One serves mint sauce with lamb. | ASD::CLEMINSHAW | | Thu Mar 28 1991 10:45 | 14 |
| Mint sauce is NOT mint jelly. My mother used to make it, and her
mother used to make it, and her mother was from Scotland, so I assume
it's a Gaelic thing. Anyway, you take a mess of fresh mint, and throw
it in the blender (or chop most finely) with about 1/2 c water, 1/2 c.
wine vinegar, and a 1.5 tablespoons of sugar. Put it in a little tiny
pitcher and serve. I'd put about a spoonful on my chunk of lamb.
Folks out there England, is this how you make it? Is there anything I
forgot?
Remember, mint sauce is as different from mint jelly as freeze-dried
instant coffee is from cappuchino. Amen!
P.
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2368.4 | Leaves only | ASD::CLEMINSHAW | | Thu Mar 28 1991 10:46 | 3 |
| ...use young fresh mint leaves, not stems.
P.
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2368.5 | Savory Mint Lamb Chops | HORSEY::MACKONIS | Howling at the Moon.... | Thu Mar 28 1991 12:10 | 24 |
| I was going to post this recipe for lamb chops with savory mint, but I am
sure it can be adapted to a leg of lamb.
SAVORY MINT LAMB CHOPS
1/4 c olive oil
1/4 c chopped fresh mint
4 large garlic gloves, minced
2 teaspoons salt
2 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp ground coriander
1 tsp cayenne pepper
1 tsp pepper
8 1-1 1/2" thick lamb loin chops, trimmed
Mix olive oil, chopped fresh mint, minced garlic, salt, cumin, coriander and
both peppers in small bowl. Spread herb mixture over both sides of the lamb
chops. Transfer chops to broiler pan, let stand 10 minutes.
Preheat broiler. Broil chops until brown and crusty, but still medium rare.
about 4 minutes per side. Arrange on a platter and garnish with fresh mint.
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2368.6 | | HORSEY::MACKONIS | Howling at the Moon.... | Thu Mar 28 1991 12:49 | 6 |
| Happen to have a couple of Bon Appetit Magazines with me this week, there were
also some recipes in there for Garlic Studded racks of Lamb and Rack of Lamb
with a Cumin-Carraway Sauce. If either of those appeal to you, I will be
glad to post.
dana
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2368.7 | Roast questions | DTRACY::ANDERSON | There's no such place as far away | Tue Mar 29 1994 12:36 | 8 |
| I'd like to do a leg of lamb for Easter dinner - but I've never tried
it before. How big of a leg do I need for 4 people? About how long
does it need to roast? Will I need to "dress" the leg at all? Of the
three common rubs in this note (lemon, rosemary, garlic) Garlic is the
only one I think Dad will eat. He's not big on mint either. Any other
spice/herb suggestions?
marianne
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2368.8 | May I suggest an after-dinner movie? | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Tue Mar 29 1994 16:54 | 5 |
| You might serve with applesauce if mint is undesirable.
Personally I like lamb on warm plates to reduce the possibility of
forming ugly, congealed fat.
John
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2368.9 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | you irritate me and my friends | Wed Mar 30 1994 10:13 | 11 |
| >How big of a leg do I need for 4 people?
You only need half of a leg. Get the shank half and butterfly it.
>About how long does it need to roast?
If you butterfly it and cook it according to Julia Child's recipe in _The Way
to Cook_, it takes 10 minutes of broiling on two sides and then about 45 minutes
of roasting. I strongly suggest using Julia's marinade. It's wonderful.
From memory, it has lemon juice, dijon mustard, soy sauce, olive oil, garlic
and rosemary.
|
2368.10 | Some more... | SUBURB::MCDONALDA | Shockwave Rider | Wed Mar 30 1994 10:52 | 59 |
| > it before. How big of a leg do I need for 4 people?
It depends how big eaters you are. I find a half leg cut more than
sufficient for 2 big eaters. That's stuffed to the gills and with left
overs. A half leg cut, with bone, weighs roughly 3 lbs (1.5 Kg). A full
leg cut would weigh roughly 6 lbs (3 Kg).
Shoulder of lamb tends to be fatty.
> About how long does it need to roast?
It depends on what you want. I think the conventional roasting time
suggests (working from memory here) 15 minutes at 200C (400F) and 15
minutes per lb at 375F or 325F (190C, 170C), but I can't remember
which. However, the British like their lamb well done i.e. cooked
through and through, much like pork. The continentals, on the other
hand, seem to prefer their lamb underdone. Your only fool proof method
is to determine how your guest like their lamb, then prod the roast
with a skewer slightly before or after the end of the recommeneded cooking
time and check the consistency of the juices. Its what I do in my
imprecise way of cooking.
After experiencing it in Geneva, my wife and I now prefer lamb slightly
undercooked i.e. pink.
> Will I need to "dress" the leg at all?
Not unless its cold or formal dress is required :-)
> Of the three common rubs in this note (lemon, rosemary, garlic) Garlic
is the only one I think Dad will eat. He's not big on mint either.
Any other spice/herb suggestions?
Lamb is one of those meats taken up by a number of cultures each adding
their own spice magic. Pick you country and go for it.
The absolute minimum you can get away with is to rub the roast with
salt and pepper. Really delicious. Another favourite is to use a
mixture of salt, pepper, ground bay and a smigen of ground mustard.
.9 recommended butterflying the joint. This essentially means boning it
and the result is a piece of meat looking like a butterfly. I would
recommend you (or the butcher) do this. But keep the bone; it makes a
wonderful stock.
There is a famous (least ways I think its famous) mediterranean marinade
for this butterfly joint. It consists of a generous amount of olive
oil, a few cloves of crushed garlic, a helping of ground bay and lemon
juice; salt and pepper is optional. Just mix the whole lot together and
marinade for 8 hours or more. To cook: stick it under a very hot grill
(broiler) for 10-15 minutes per side or more if you want it really well
done. Alternatively, stick it on the barbaque. I suppose you could then
roll it and roast it as a conventional roast.
A final suggestion. Unless you like fatty lamb, I suggest you score the
skin/fat of the lamb before roasting.
Angus
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2368.11 | | CDROM::SHIPLEY | Smmeeeeegggg Heeeeeeeeead | Sun Apr 03 1994 19:57 | 11 |
|
I cooked a boned leg of lamb, self-boned so it ended up looking
not too pretty...8^(}, so I stuffed it...
1 used breadcrumbs, chopped mushrooms, sweetcorn kernels and
an egg to bind. Add salt/pepper and preferred herbs etc to taste...
If you make a lot of stuffing, the rest can be baked separately
while roasting...
With/without mint sauce, I thought it really worked...
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2368.12 | Grilled Lamb Leg | ISLNDS::WHITMORE | | Mon May 09 1994 13:40 | 33 |
| A little late for Easter, but maybe next year.
I do A *LOT* of lamb. Easter means grilled leg of lamb with my special
marinade.
Take every single visible piece of fat off that lamb. I mean it! You
don't need it and you certainly won't miss the congealed mess that it
leaves on your plates. This has got to be one of the most important
steps to cooking good lamb. I just don't understand why people who
will assiduously remove every shred of fat from beef will attempt to
cook a lamb cut which is covered with an inch of fat! Get rid of it!
Next, cut a whole bunch of garlic cloves (peeled) into slivers, and go
bananas with a nice sharp knife. Stab a hole in the meat, then poke
the garlic sliver in. As mich as you like.
Then, crush up some juniper berries with the flat of a knife. Don't
pyuulverize them, just flatten them a bit and break them into small
pieces if they want to break up. Rub them all over the meat, inside
and out. (You *did* remove the fat from inside, didn't you?) Then rub
all over with GOOD BALSAMIC Vinegar. No substitutes. Wrap well in
aluminum foil, let sit in the fridge a couple of days. (If you aren't
reading this til the morning of, that's okay too - a couple of hours
will do nicely but I'd add more balsamic vinegar)
Wrap again in aluminum foil, put over hot coals for a couple of hours,
turning every 20 minutes.
Uncover, serve immediately, with the sauce that formed inside the foil,
and be prepared for the best lamb you've ever had.
Enjoy,
Dana
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2368.13 | I do the garlic thing with pork | SNOC02::MASCALL | Art Imitates Life. Again. | Mon May 09 1994 20:29 | 7 |
| Never tried it with lamb!
I crust the lamb with grainy dijon mustard. MMmmmMMMMMmmmm ...
~Sheridan~
:^)
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2368.14 | And for the next course.... | GALVIA::HELSOM | Don't mind that, sir. It's only a slowworm. | Mon May 16 1994 08:44 | 10 |
| Roast leg of lamb with *lots* of garlic is the best roast there is. (I've had a
running battle for the past 20 years to persuade my family to serve it while
it's still pink, though...)
But even better is *cold lamb sandwiches* the next day...chewy white or granary
bread, a thin spread of English or serious Dijon mustard on the lamb and nothing
else...especially the bits of meat between the bones that you can't see to carve
when it's hot....:-) :-) :-) :-) :-) :-)
Helen
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