A second post involving the Welsh
speciality laverbread; a deep green gelatinous sauce made from well-stewed
seaweed known locally as laver (see
the previous post). I still had some left over for this recipe which I made for
my friend Charlotte – a veteran of my cooking, poor woman – as it was her
birthday and luckily she requested lamb.
This is a recipe that I couldn’t do when I
was in America because what you don’t want are nice pre-butchered racks, but a
whole best end of neck. This is the upper part of the back and ribs that sequesters
the beautifully tender lamb cutlets. If you can, wait until the lamb are a
little older; these muscles don’t do much work so they don’t have as much
flavour as, say, leg. Older animals have worked a bit longer so there is some
make up in the flavour department. Also, they’re much bigger so you get more
meat in your best end of neck.
Anyways, ask the butcher for one best end of neck, then ask him (or
her) to split it down the centre, removing the backbone. Take the meat home,
including the bones that he removed and you paid for!
Now prepare the lamb ready for roasting by cutting
away any fat and meat from the ribs, don’t go too far down – maybe and inch and
a half at the wider end and an inch at the thin end.
You should end up with two racks that can be propped up against each other with bones interlacing like fingers. Now take a clove of garlic and slice it thinly. Make holes down the fatty sides of the racks with a very sharp pointy knife and slot a sliver of garlic in each one. Season the lamb all over and put it in a roasting tin so that the ribs criss-cross.
Cover the exposed bones with a piece of foil so that they do not burn. Roast the lamb for 45 minutes at 220⁰C (425⁰F) for pink lamb, going up to 60 minutes for well-done (though cooking it well done would be a travesty in my humble opinion).
You should end up with two racks that can be propped up against each other with bones interlacing like fingers. Now take a clove of garlic and slice it thinly. Make holes down the fatty sides of the racks with a very sharp pointy knife and slot a sliver of garlic in each one. Season the lamb all over and put it in a roasting tin so that the ribs criss-cross.
Cover the exposed bones with a piece of foil so that they do not burn. Roast the lamb for 45 minutes at 220⁰C (425⁰F) for pink lamb, going up to 60 minutes for well-done (though cooking it well done would be a travesty in my humble opinion).
Next, make the gravy by first making a lamb
stock from the bones and trimmings (this bit can be done well in advance). Add
them to a saucepan with a carrot and
a tomato both roughly chopped, a
pint of beef stock and some salt and pepper. Bring to a simmer and let it tick away for a couple of
hours or more if you can. Pass through a sieve and cool. Remove the floating
fat and return to the pan with a glass of white
wine or vermouth. Reduce until
you get a well-flavoured stock. Lastly, slake a tablespoon of cornflour with a little cold water and
stir into the stock to produce a nice gravy.
When the lamb is ready, take it out of the
oven and cover with foil and let it rest whilst you make the laverbread sauce.
Melt 3 ounces of butter in a
saucepan and add a pound of laverbread.
When hot, stir I the juice of 1 lemon
and 2 oranges. Season with salt and pepper.
Place the lamb in the centre of a serving
dish, pouring any juices in the gravy. Pour the sauce around the edges of the
lamb and then decorate with thinly sliced oranges.
#353 Roast
Rack of Lamb with Laverbread. Well the meat (which I cooked pink) was absolutely
delicious, tender and well-flavoured. I wasn’t sure about the laverbread at
first – it not being cut by the bland oatmeal like in the previous recipe – but
I soon got used to it. The taste is very strong, but when eaten with the lamb
you can see why they are eaten together so often. The gravy too was excellent;
mild and not in the slightest bit greasy as lamb gravy can so often be. 9/10
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