Book: 30 Minute Meals
Recipe: Spring Lamb, Vegetable Platter, Mint Sauce and Chanti Gravy (I did not do the chocolate fondue)
Ingredients:
Serves 6
For The Lamb
1 quality 8-bone rack of lamb, fat removed
1 2-piece pack quality lamb neck fillet, approximately 250g
3 sprigs fresh rosemary
2 cloves garlic
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
white wine vinegar
300 g cherry tomatoes on the vine
For The Gravy
4 rashers higher-welfare smoked bacon
2 sprigs fresh rosemary
1 heaped tablespoon plain flour
½ glass red wine
For The Vegetables
500 g baby new potatoes
250 g baby carrots
1 bunch fresh mint, stalks of
1 organic chicken stock cube
200 g fine beans
200 g runner beans
½ Savoy cabbage
200 g frozen peas
1 knob butter
½ lemon
For The Mint Sauce
1 bunch fresh mint, leaves from
4 tablespoons red wine vinegar
1 tablespoon golden caster sugar
For The Seasonings
olive oil
extra virgin olive oil
sea salt
black
pepper
Method:
Get all your ingredients and equipment ready. Put a large frying pan and
a large saucepan on a high heat. Fill and boil the kettle. Turn the oven on to
220°C/425°F/gas 7. Halve the rack of lamb, then season with salt & pepper and add to
the frying pan with a lug of olive oil.
Wash the potatoes and trim the tops of the carrots. Add everything to
the large saucepan with a pinch of salt. Rip the leafy tops off the bunch of
mint and put aside for the mint sauce. Make sure the band is still around the
stalks, then add them to the saucepan. Just cover with boiled water and crumble
in the chicken stock cube. Put the lid on.
Drizzle olive oil straight into the pack of neck fillet and season. Turn
the racks of lamb then put the two neck fillets in the pan. Sear the ends of
the meat and keep coming back to the pan and turning each piece so they brown
all over.
Pull the leaves off 3 sprigs of rosemary and put into a pestle &
mortar with a good pinch of salt & pepper. Peel the garlic, add to the
mortar, and pound really well. Turn the lamb over. Add Dijon mustard to the
mortar with a good couple of lugs of olive oil and a swig of white wine
vinegar. Mix well.
Make sure all sides of the lamb are seared, then use tongs to transfer
all of it to a roasting tray. Pour away most of the fat in the pan, then put it
back on a very low heat for the gravy. Spoon the dressing from the pestle &
mortar over the lamb and put the vines of cherry tomatoes on top. Move
everything around until well coated in the dressing. Sprinkle with salt, then
whack on the top shelf of the oven and set the timer for 14 minutes for
blushing to medium meat, slightly less for rare, and more for well done. Turn
the racks over halfway through.
Finely slice the bacon and put into the frying pan. Finely chop the reserved mint leaves and add to the unwashed pestle
& mortar. Pound, then add the red wine vinegar, caster sugar, a pinch of
salt and 2 tablespoons of cooking water from the veg pot. Muddle together with
the pestle, have a taste to check the balance, and add a tiny splash of extra
virgin olive oil. Take to the table with a spoon.
Turn the heat under the bacon right up and add the leaves from the
rosemary. Stir in the flour, red wine and a few ladles of cooking water. Trim all the beans and put the runner beans through a runner bean slicer
or slice at an angle, 1cm thick. Cut the Savoy cabbage half in two and click
off any fatty outer leaves, then discard the stalk. Cut the cabbage into thin
wedges. Add the cabbage, beans and peas to the saucepan, then stir and put the
lid back on.
Turn the lamb over. If your tomatoes are colouring too much, lean the
meat on top of them. Stir in a spoonful of cooking water if needed.
When the 14 minutes are up, take your lamb out of the oven and leave it
to rest for a minute. Drain the veg in a colander, then return them to the pan. Drizzle well
with extra virgin olive oil, and add a good pinch of salt & pepper and a
knob of butter. Squeeze over the juice of ½ a lemon and toss well. Tip on to a
large serving platter and take to the table.
Taste and correct the seasoning, then pour into a gravy boat and take to
the table.
Cut the racks into individual chops and slice up the neck fillet. Pile
on a platter. Move most of the cherry tomatoes to the platter on top of the
lamb, mushing the rest into the cooking juices. Stir in a good lug of extra
virgin olive oil, then drizzle over the platter and serve.
Changes Made: I forgot to get the neck from the butcher.
Results: Everything a lamb rack should be! Lamb was cooked perfectly and the mint sauce has the perfect amount of kick from the vinegar.
Next Time: The neck would have been a nice variation in the meat,
No comments:
Post a Comment