Lamb

406 recipes found

Spanish-Style Lamb Stew
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Spanish-Style Lamb Stew

John Willoughby fell in love with pimentón, a smoky Spanish paprika, after a trip to La Vera, a region west of Madrid, first encountering it in a lamb stew. “The stew, rich with the slight gaminess of lamb, the tang of sherry and the smooth comfort of white beans, was brought to greatness by the subtle heat and almost mysterious smokiness of the pimentón,” he wrote. He drew inspiration from the stew, making his own version at home and bringing this recipe to The Times in 2010.

2h 30m6 servings
Inside-Out Lamb Cheeseburgers
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Inside-Out Lamb Cheeseburgers

Grind the lamb for these smoked mozzarella-stuffed patties yourself and you'll be rewarded with burgers that are full of flavor. "Grinding" may sound intimidating, but it's easy and quick to do it at home with a food processor. Then be sure to handle the meat gently. Make the patties with a light hand, and resist the urge to press on them with a spatula as they cook.

20m4 servings
Lucky Peach Lamb Burgers
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Lucky Peach Lamb Burgers

Peter Meehan developed this dish for Lucky Peach's cookbook, "101 Easy Asian Recipes." I make it on a flat-top griddle set over a grill, but the method works equally well on your kitchen stove. The burgers are a take on a dish served in Xi’an, the capital city of Shaanxi province in northwestern China, at the easternmost terminus of the Silk Road. Cumin and chile, along with some Sichuan peppercorns if you can find them, bring a bright funkiness to ground lamb, which crisps up beautifully on top of a bed of sautéed red onion and jalapeño pepper. Put the patties into potato buns, and serve under a spray of cilantro leaves. It's a meal you could cook twice a month for the better part of a year.

20m4 burgers
Grilled Lamb Chops With Rouille and Cherry Tomatoes
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Grilled Lamb Chops With Rouille and Cherry Tomatoes

The rouille helps the chops char while they absorb all that garlicky-saffron flavor, which is underscored by a dollop of sauce on the side and a garnish of sweet cherry tomatoes.

15m2 to 3 servings
Meatloaf With Moroccan Spices
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Meatloaf With Moroccan Spices

This recipe is from "A Meatloaf in Every Oven," by Frank Bruni and Jennifer Steinhauer, who say it was the invention of a friend, Anne Kornblut. The plethora of spices and large amounts of garlic may seem overwhelming, but ground meat has a deep tolerance for seasoning and is usually improved by it. The fresh herbs are a foil for all the rich seasonings, and the vegetables give the loaf an especially lovely texture.

2h 30m6 generous servings
Grilled Lamb Chops With Lettuce and Ranch Dressing
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Grilled Lamb Chops With Lettuce and Ranch Dressing

Cooking lamb chops hot and fast keeps them juicy and perfectly pink inside. Here, they’re first marinated in an herby garlic paste, then grilled or broiled and served with crisp lettuce hearts and a tangy ranch dressing (made from more of that same herb garlic paste). Quick and easy enough for a weeknight, these chops are also always an impressive meal to serve to guests. You’ll probably have some ranch dressing left over. It will keep for a week in the fridge and is also excellent as a sauce for grilled chicken, or as a dip for vegetables and crackers.

40m4 servings
Spiced Lamb Burgers
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Spiced Lamb Burgers

This recipe came from a revelation in the ’70s, when my friend Semeon Tsalbins introduced me to the lamb burger. It is ground lamb — shoulder is best — highly seasoned and grilled rare. Because lamb is the most full-flavored of the everyday meats, it makes a more delicious plain burger than beef. Cooked with nothing but salt, it’s fantastic. Cooked with a variety of spices, as it is here, it’s a game-changer. You can also stuff the burger, as Mr. Tsalbins does on occasion, with smoked mozzarella.

20m4 burgers
Grilled Lamb Kebabs With Smoky Peaches
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Grilled Lamb Kebabs With Smoky Peaches

Taking a cue from the hot-weather regions of the world, John Willoughby and Chris Schlesinger go heavy with the seasoning here, but the key is when that happens. Instead of a marinade, or a spice rub, they grill the lamb and season it after with garlic, basil, vinegar and Tabasco sauce. It’s a great way to add big flavor without spending all day in the kitchen.

35m4 servings
Grilled Garlicky Lamb Shoulder Chops with Sherry Vinegar and Radicchio
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Grilled Garlicky Lamb Shoulder Chops with Sherry Vinegar and Radicchio

10m4 servings
Simple Grilled Lamb Chops
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Simple Grilled Lamb Chops

30mServes 6
Braised Lamb Shanks With Lemon
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Braised Lamb Shanks With Lemon

Many of us had our earliest experiences with braised foods not at the pricey restaurants that have recently rediscovered their appeal but at the Greek diners that never forgot it. So it's not surprising that I associate braised lamb shanks with egg-lemon sauce, a Greek staple. But when I set about to recreate this standard dish I found the sauce superfluous. Though a slow-cooked pot of braised lamb shanks and root vegetables becomes so sweet that it begs for something to counter it, it is also so rich that the thick sauce (a primitive form of béarnaise, really) is overkill. Better, it seems to me, is to finish the braised shanks with what you might call lemon-lemon sauce, using both a lemon's zest and a lemon's juice. That little touch converts this dish from a delicious but perhaps one-dimensional stew to something more, a braise that may never look particularly elegant but tastes that way.

2h4 servings
Homemade Merguez
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Homemade Merguez

15mAbout 1 pound of sausages
Lamb's-Neck Rillettes
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Lamb's-Neck Rillettes

7h 40mServes 12 to 16
Sabzi (Spinach and Lamb Stew)
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Sabzi (Spinach and Lamb Stew)

Sabzi is one of the traditional dishes served during Afghan Nowruz, the celebration of the new year and vernal equinox, and Durkhanai Ayubi included this recipe from her mother, Farida Ayubi, in their cookbook “Parwana: Recipes and Stories From an Afghan Kitchen.” The rich green hue of this dish symbolizes the arrival of spring and new life. In the book, Ms. Ayubi uses a pressure cooker for the lamb — you can as well — but the stovetop version below doesn’t take very long. Either way, the lamb becomes tender in an intensely flavorful broth of onion, garlic and chile. It then simmers in cooked spinach, fragrant with fried cilantro and garlic chives. This soul-affirming sabzi, along with its traditional accompaniment of challaw, a spiced Afghan rice dish, is a welcome way to celebrate the reawakening of nature.

2h 30m6 servings
Lamb With Red Wine And Dried Cherries
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Lamb With Red Wine And Dried Cherries

40m2 servings
Cassoulet-Style Lamb Shanks and Beans
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Cassoulet-Style Lamb Shanks and Beans

This is not a full-blown cassoulet, chock-full of sausages and duck confit, but it is so satisfying nonetheless. It takes a couple of days to put together because you have to cook the lamb and cook the beans, combine them, and bake them twice. The result is a dish of enchanting deep flavor. (Simmering the seasoned lamb results in a delicious broth.)

4h 30m8 to 10 servings
Lamb Stew With Peaches and Verjuice
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Lamb Stew With Peaches and Verjuice

3h6 servings
Roast Lamb
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Roast Lamb

If you haven't cooked a whole leg of lamb before, here is the place to start. This is not a revolutionary recipe, but slathering on butter and (take our word for it) anchovies makes this version truly essential. It is excellent for the Easter feast — lamb has ancient associations with springtime, and it pairs well with sharp spring vegetables like asparagus, dandelion greens and artichokes. Lamb is also popular for Passover, but the leg is not considered kosher unless the sciatic nerve is removed. Some kosher butchers offer that, but we also give options for other cuts like shoulder and double loin. The butter can be replaced by duck or goose fat, or olive oil, but the gravy (made from pan drippings) will need to be adjusted. For roasting, meaty American lamb is preferable to cuts from Australia and New Zealand. Most American lambs are fed both grass and grain, yielding meat that is fine-grained, earthy and mild. More Easter lamb recipes and how to carve a leg of lamb.

3h8 to 12 servings
Almost-Spit-Roasted Moroccan Lamb
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Almost-Spit-Roasted Moroccan Lamb

For special occasions in Morocco, a whole lamb is turned on a spit over coals for hours, until the exterior is browned and crisp, with tender juicy meat within. Paula Wolfert, the great American authority on Moroccan food, gives this slow-roasting method for achieving similar delicious results in a home oven. Ask your butcher for front quarter of lamb (also called a half bone-on chuck). It is comprised of the neck, shoulder, front shank, and some ribs, all in one piece. Alternatively, ask for 2 large bone-in shoulder roasts. The lamb emerges succulent and fragrant, thanks to careful basting with butter and spices. Serve it with warm chick peas, cumin-flavored salt and a dab of spicy harissa.

5h8 to 10 servings
Butterflied Leg of Lamb With Lemon Salsa Verde
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Butterflied Leg of Lamb With Lemon Salsa Verde

One of the joys of a butterflied leg of lamb is that it satisfies lovers of rare and medium-well meat at the same time. This is because of its uneven thickness. When you spread the meat out and roast or grill it at high heat, the thicker parts stay pinker than the thinner bits. Everyone ends up happy. Here, the meat is seasoned with cumin, lemon, chiles and plenty of fresh herbs, and is served with a mixed-herb salsa verde perked up with preserved lemon. It makes a particularly zesty main course for any large gathering. If you would rather grill the lamb, go right ahead. It will take about 12 to 17 minutes per side when grilled directly over the coals or flames.

1h 45m12 servings
Sabut Raan (Roast Leg of Lamb)
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Sabut Raan (Roast Leg of Lamb)

This recipe for a whole roasted leg of lamb comes from the cookbook author Sameen Rushdie, who wrote "Indian Cookery," the classic published in Great Britain in 1988. On Sundays, after a matinee at the Metro Cub Club in Bombay, the Rushdie family often sat down to a special lunch of roast lamb. In this version, the yogurt marinade turns into a rich sauce as it mixes with the braising liquid in the oven. Ms. Rushdie still turns to the dish as the centerpiece of a dinner party, because it can be set up ahead of time and cooked in the oven. The leg is trimmed of all fat, so it’s important to keep it moist: For the first couple of hours of cooking, keep it covered, with some water in the pan, then uncover and let the surface brown a little at the end.

2h 45m6 servings
Leg of Lamb With Savory Beans
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Leg of Lamb With Savory Beans

In France, gigot d’agneau — leg of lamb — is, well, de rigueur for a proper Easter meal. But it is always appropriate for any special dinner party, or any occasion throughout the year when you want an impressive main course. The technique is simple and requires few ingredients (garlic, thyme and rosemary), but the result is very flavorful. Seasoning the lamb for at least an hour in advance of roasting is essential. Refrigerate it overnight for more intense flavor; it’s also less work to do on the day of the feast. Just remove from the refrigerator, bring it to room temperature, and it’s ready for the oven.

2h8 to 10 servings
Lamb Chops
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Lamb Chops

When you think of finger foods, thoughts generally gravitate toward something small and wrapped in bacon. For a more elegant approach, roasted meat is the way to go. Roasting this rack of lamb whole makes it easier to cook it to your liking; using a meat thermometer is essential. Once cooked, slice into individual chops for an appetizer for up to 8 people (or cut into double chops to serve 4 as a main). If you can get small lamb chops (teeny-tiny but not fussy), cover the bones in scallion ''sleeves” for a whimsical look and a practical touch. If your guests don’t mind, they’ll have a built-in utensil — something like a lamb lollipop.

30m8 appetizer servings, 4 dinner servings
Grilled Marinated Lamb Brochettes
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Grilled Marinated Lamb Brochettes

1h4 servings