Tag Archives: Lamb

Stout Braised Lamb Shanks – French Cooking with a Twist

As I noticed recently while writing my weblog on Chicken Marsala, I have written 6 Italian recipes and 0 French recipes. While, I’ve tried defending myself by pointing out that this is a budget blog specializing in cooking meals for under 5 dollars a head, not all of French cuisine is foie gras and escargot. In fact, I think most of the really great French cuisine is elevated peasant food: Coq au Vin, Beef Bourguignon, ratatouille, and crepes.

So, it is a bit of a travesty that I have been blogging for a half a year now, and not posted one French dish. I mean, let’s face it, France really is the father of modern dining. With that in mind I have decided to post a French-inspired recipe of my favorite meat of all time: lamb. (Say it with me now, with your best Homer Simpson impression, mmm…Lamb.)

Lamb is a lovely meat. Depending on the cut it can be seared rare, roasted, or slow cooked. I love them all. It’s not the cheapest meat of all time, though unless you live in Australia (where it is cheaper than chicken, I swear.) The shanks (the leg meat) is affordable when you are lucky enough to find it. I am not sure why most grocery stores only carry it about half of the time, but whenever you do find it, is one of the cheapest cuts of lamb.

I remember the first time I bought lamb shanks, I had no idea what I was buying. I was living in Australia with Jodie at the time, and, like I said, lamb was dirt cheap. I had made lamb many ways while we were there. This was when I was very young and had very little experience cooking, mind you. So, I bought two lamb shanks took them home, and promptly seared them rare in a skillet. If you know anything about shank meat, it takes hours for the connective tissue to break down and become the tender amazing flesh we are used to having. Otherwise you are trying to chew on what amounts to gristle. Let’s just say that pizzas were ordered that night.

This is why the French invented braising. Braising is when you take a tough piece of meat full of fat and connective tissues and cook it long and slow until it melts into the meat and creates a tender, buttery sensation in your mouth that English doesn’t have proper words to describe. Peasants often used this method because these cuts of the meat were not considered as desirable to the upper class (who were clearly lazy and dumb.)

Now, if you have been reading my blog, I hope you have noticed that I like to take very traditional foods of any culture and give them my own modern  twist. The same is true with my lamb shank.

In France it is traditional to braise your shank with Burgandy wine. (That is there way of saying Pinot Noir, basically…more on that another time.) While I like cooking in wine…I love cooking in beer. So, I replaced the wine with a dark porter or stout. (Such as Guinness or Murphy’s.) Don’t worry, wine fanatics, the resulting shanks will still pair very well with a Pinot Noir. I would recommend Cambria if you can spring for it. Of course, it also pairs perfectly well with whatever beer you cooked it in. I like to serve it with the coarsely chopped vegetables I cooked the lamb in over cous cous. One of my favorite meals I know how to make. Divine. (While I travelled in Europe, my favorite food was Italian in general, but the best meal I had was in France. It is similar in my own kitchen. I prefer Italian, but some of my absolute favorite recipes are French.)

Stout Braised Lamb Shanks

1 Tbsp vegetable oil

4 lamb shanks

flour for dredging

2 leeks, halved lengthwise and chopped 1/4” thick

6 cloves garlic, halved or quartered

2 carrots, chopped ½“ thick

2 celery ribs, chopped coarsely

2 tbsp tomato paste

1 (12 fluid ounce) bottle stout (such as Guinness®) or porter

1 ¾ cup beef broth

8 to 10 mushrooms, halved or quartered

3 sprigs fresh thyme

1 bay leaf

1 sprig fresh rosemary

2 tbsp olive oil

salt and pepper to taste

  1. Dredge lamb shanks in flour.
  2. Heat oil in a dutch oven or large, wide pot over medium-high heat until shimmering. Sear the lamb shanks in the hot oil on all sides until well browned, about 10 minutes. This can be done 2 lamb shanks at a time, if all 4 do not fit in your pot at the same time.  After browning, remove lamb shanks and set aside.
  3. Pour the excess grease from the Dutch oven, if necessary, reduce heat to medium, and stir in the onions and garlic. Cook and stir until the onions have softened and turned translucent, about 5 minutes.
  4. Stir in the carrots, celery, and tomato paste; continue cooking 5 minutes more.
  5. Return the lamb shanks to the dutch oven, and pour in the stout beer and beef broth. Add thyme and bay leaf and bring to a simmer over high heat.
  6. Once the lamb shanks begin to simmer, reduce the heat to medium-low, cover, and simmer until the lamb is very tender and nearly falling off of the bone, 2 to 3 hours. Stir the lamb occasionally as it cooks, and add water if needed to keep the cooking liquid from becoming too thick (I rarely find this needed.) You want the cooking liquid to have reduced into a nice sauce by the time the lamb shanks are done. Stir in the mushrooms, rosemary sprig, and salt and pepper to taste during the last 10 minutes of cooking. Remove rosemary, thyme sprigs and bay leaf before serving. Serve shanks and vegetables over cous cous or orzo pasta immediately, passing the remaining sauce.

Lamb Burgers

For just $4.99 per person, you can make a nice summer-y 5ive $ Feast for two.

Well, it’s May, and we all know what that means…warm weather is either here or on it’s way. That means it is time to get outside and fire up that grill. Whether it’s your state of the art grill in your backyard (nice four burner grills are very affordable these days. Consumer Reports suggests a Char-Broil as the best buy. They are cheaper than many other grills that get less good reviews. I love mine. No, I don’t receive any money from Char-Broil) or a small charcoal tabletop grill, grilling is possibly the most American culinary tradition.

We Americans truly have a love affair with our grills.  I know guys who do not know how to use a can opener, but can flip a burger or beer baste a brat to perfection every Sunday during football.

Mankind has been cooking meat over an open flame for hundreds of thousands of years. It is a very primordial skill that we all take pride in, even if we rarely turn on our stoves.

While, there is absolutely nothing wrong with grabbing a pack of burgers and sausages and cooking them up on a grill, I thought today I would share a slightly offbeat version of a burger, in case you wanted to stretch your horizons.

Whenever I find ground lamb in the grocery store, I must snatch it up. Normally it can be  expensive, but I love the flavor and I think it is surprisingly versatile. From burgers to kebabs to meatballs or just cooked in your favorite curry sauce, there are many more uses for ground lamb than you might think.

I kept the lamb in my freezer for a couple of weeks until the weather  warmed up.

Then, after a trip to my local Fresh and Easy (they don’t pay me either, I promise) I gathered up the rest of the ingredients I needed.

I wanted to give it a slightly Mediterranean feel, so I grabbed Goat Cheese and a cucumber, and a crispy beet salad mix to serve as a side.  Fresh and Easy also has some very nice Mexican Bolillos that I thought would make the perfect bun.  Jodie and I washed it down with their new pomegranate lime aid, although a wheat beer or glass of pinot noir may have been tasty as well. I used spices readily available in my kitchen, and would recommend that you do the same rather than trying to match exactly what I used. There is no need to run out and grab spices you are not used to.  The result was a surprisingly light but flavorful burger that tasted great on a hot day.

Lamb Burgers

1 pound ground lamb

3 cloves garlic, minced or pressed

1 tsp fennel (again, use whatever herbs sound best to you. I love fennel and lamb, but mint, coriander, and/or cumin are all also great choices for dried herbs as well. Use what you have and what you like)

1 tsp dried rosemary

salt and pepper to taste

1 tsp dill

1 cucumber

2 buns or rolls (I used Mexican Bolillos)

1 small package of herbed goat cheese (if your goat cheese is not herbed, you may add the herbs yourself)

  1. Preheat the grill to medium heat (if using a charcoal grill, light the charcoal by your preferred method and let the coals come to a dull orange glow.)
  2. Combine the ground lamb, garlic, fennel, dried rosemary (or your own spice blend,) salt and pepper into a bowl and mix well. Divide the meat into two even ½ pound balls and place them on a cutting board.
  3. Form the patties.  This is the secret of a good burger and there are a few tricks to it: First, “knead” the meat as if it were dough for three to five minutes per patty.  If you skip this step, your burger will form cracks along the edge of the patty. Each crack is a place where juices can spill out during cooking. Lost juice = lost flavor. Second, and this is tricky, try to pull the meat from the center rather than apply pressure from the top of the burger. This is again to prevent cracks along the edge of the patty.  Whatever technique you find to keep these cracks from appearing, use it. You want one smooth edge all the way around your patties. Third, it is important to make the center of the burger indented from the edge. The center of the burger will plump and it will leave your burger bloated and ball-like if you don’t make an indentation to give it room to plump. Your raw patties should be concave.
  4.  Using tongs and an oiled paper towel, oil the slats of the grill.  Cook the burger for 2 to 3 minutes then turn them ¼ turn, so that you get nice cross-hatching grill marks. (This is for aesthetics only.) Cook for another 2 to 3 minutes (4 to 6 minutes total,) flip the burger and repeat the process.
  5. While the burger is cooking, cut your buns in half if needed. Spread the herbed goat cheese on the underside of the top bun. Slice a cucumber thinly (use a mondolin if you have it, but a chef’s knife will work just fine) and place them on top of the goat cheese. Sprinkle the cucumbers and goat cheese with some dill if you have it on hand.
  6. Remove the finished burgers from the grill and place them on top of the bottom bun.  Top with the upper bun (you know, with all the goat cheese, cucumber goodness on it.) Serve with a side salad topped with any remaining goat cheese or cucmbers.

Accounting

I bought the lamb on sale, the cucumber at a local store with cheap produce, shopped for cheese and sides at Fresh and Easy, and used my own spices at home to make this meal affordable. (I accounted for ½ half the package of buns, even though I only used 2 of 6, just in case you can’t find other ways to use them.)

1 pound ground lamb $3.99 + 1 cucumber $.49 + ½ package of bollilos $1.00 + herbed goat cheese $2.99 + ½ package of crispy beet salad + ¼ of pomegranate limeaid $.75 = $9.22

÷2 people

Comes to $4.61 per person. You don’t have to cook for a crowd to have a 5ive $ Feast!

Kitchen Basics used:

Salt, pepper, garlic, fennel, dried rosemary, dill


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