LAMB SHANKS IN PORT AND RED WINE WITH SUN DRIED TOMATOES
My first signature dish, everyone needs a signature dish or two, maybe three. Something you cook really well.
This recipe I combined from a few recipes I’d seen and eaten.
My first experience of this recipe was at a country pub not too far from Bath, www.visitbath.co.uk. The meal was so popular at the pub you would have to give your order at the time of reserving a table.
When my daughter told me this I was wondering why it was so popular. Once eating the meal I knew why, it was very good. It had to be ordered in advance as it takes a few hours to cook.
My version is cooked wholly in my electric wok and slow cooker. You can use a heavy frying pan and a casserole dish in the oven. Or even completely on a low setting in your wok.
Now the recipe:
Ingredients:
Lamb shanks 1 per person
Plain flour
Virgin olive oil
Sprigs of fresh rosemary
Small onions 2 or 3 per shank
Sundried tomatoes half a cup drained
Port 125 ml
Dry red wine 375 ml
Chicken stock 125ml
Chopped parsley
Method:
Toss the lamb shanks in the flour:
Heat the olive oil and brown the shanks with a few sprigs of rosemary.
Drain off the excess oil on kitchen roll:
Put the shanks into your slow cooker or slow cook in the oven:
Fry the onions with the rosemary for a few minutes to soften a little, I feel this brings out more of the onion flavour, remove the rosemary.
Add the onions, sun dried tomatoes, port, red wine and chicken stock.
Cook slowly 4 to 6 hours until shanks are fully cooked; i.e. flesh beginning to fall off the bone.
Add a few sprigs of fresh rosemary towards end of cooking.
Remove shanks and keep warm. Put the heat setting on your slow cooker to high and simmer the juices until sauce thickens. Add corn flour thickener if necessary.
Sprinkle over the chopped parsley
Serve with broccoli or asparagus and fresh baby carrots.
I fry asparagus in a little olive oil and fresh ground black pepper and sprinkle with fresh lemon zest. Don't over cook the asparagus.
John’s style roast potatoes.
Serve a lemon sorbet to clean the pallet before serving dessert.
Try a measure of peppermint liqueur or cordial with the lemon sorbet.
Something I found out getting rid of a bottle of Crème de Menthe.
Save the richer red wine and rest of the port for after dinner cheese and biscuits.
2 comments:
This is truly a European meal fit for a Queen or King's palate. I love the lemon sorbet part, ahhh- true decadence. Although I am not a meat eater every time I see my mother (such as last night) she serves us lamb. Reminds me of "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" whereupon the Aunt hearing of the soon to be groom's vegetarian lifestyle, says, "That's all right. I make lamb". To many out there it makes no sense to not eat meat.
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My cousin recommended this blog and she was totally right keep up the fantastic work
Wok Cooker
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