. . : Braised Lamb with Fruits & Nuts Recipe - Quick Recipes, Easy Meal Ideas, Food online : : .
. : : Menu : : .


> Categories:
Appetizers   Baked Goods   Barbeque   Basics   Beans and Grains   Beef   Beverages   Breads   Breakfasts   Cake   Candies   Canning and Preserving   Casseroles   Cheese   Chicken   Chocolate   Condiments   Cookies   Crock Pot and Slow Cooker   Desserts   Duck   Eggs   Fruits   Grains   Herbs and Spices   Holiday   Hot and Spicy   Jellies and Jams   Kids   Lamb   Liquor   Main Dish   Mexican   Nuts   Pasta   Pets   Quick and Easy   Recipes for Pets   Regional Cuisine   Rice   Salad   Sauces   Sausages   Seafood   Side Dish   Snacks   Soups   Stews   Stuffings   Sweets and Desserts   Vegetables   Vegetarian   Wild Game  

Braised Lamb with Fruits & Nuts
Category Lamb
Total Hits 595
Rating Rating:0 | Voted:0 | voted : 0 times
1 Point 2 Point 3 Point 4 Point 5 Point 6 Point 7 Point 8 Point 9 Point 10 Point
The Recipe

Text Only This Indian dish is anything but understated. It piles flavour upon flavour to stunning effect and would overwhelm milk-fed lamb. Amazingly, for something so sumptuous, it is comparatively nutritionally sound, as it has been modified to eliminate most saturated fat. However it is not for the meal-in-a-moment cook. Cover 45 g of raisins and 30 g sultanas in boiling water. Leave to soak. Trim an 800 g boneless piece of young lamb (leg or shoulder) of all visible fat. Put the piece in a large saucepan and add 3 cups of water, a tablespoon of lemon juice and 2 bay leaves. Cover, bring to the boil, skim, and simmer very gently for about one hour or until a skewer glides into the meat with ease. Remove the meat, setting it aside, and reduce the stock over high heat to about 1/4 of a cup. Reserve the stock and wash the saucepan. Into a processor bowl put 2 large onions quartered, 6 cloves of garlic, 5 cm ginger roughly chopped, 1/2 tablespoon ground cardamom, 2 tablespoons ground coriander, 1 teaspoon ground cloves, 1 tablespoon white poppy seeds, 45 g ground almonds and 1 teaspoon black pepper. Process to a paste. Chop

finely a generous handful of fresh mint and have ready 200 g plain yoghurt (low fat yoghurt can be used). Heat 2 tablespoons mono- or polyun- saturated oil in the saucepan, add onion and spice paste and fry, stirring, for about 3 minutes or until it is fragrant. Add the mint and yoghurt and simmer gently till the sauce is thick and creamy. Return the meat to the saucepan, spooning the sauce over it, cover and braise gently until the meat is heated through. Add the reserved stock to the saucepan and stir through. Continue to simmer uncovered until the stock is completely reduced. Sprinkle over the meat and sauce 2 teaspoons garam masala, 1 teaspoon chilli powder and salt to taste if you regard it as necessary. In a frying pan, heat a little oil and gently fry the drained sultanas and raisins, together with 45 g blanched slivered almonds, for about 5 minutes. Add them to the saucepan and stir. Infuse a few strands of saffron in a tablespoon of boiling water and add 1 1/2 teaspoons of rosewater. Stir this mixture into the saucepan and heat for a minute or so more. Slice the meat, which by now should be meltingly tender, and arrange on a serving dish. Spoon the sauce over the meat. Serve with rice. Makes 4 to 6 servings. From "Raw Materials" by Meryl Constance, The Syndey Morning Herald, 10/6/92. Courtesy Mark Herron.

Posted by Stephen Ceideberg; October 30 1992.

Render: 0.001 Sec ¦ By AhmBay