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Spicy Lamb Stew

Spicy Lamb Stew

This recipe, adapted from one in the Niman Ranch Cookbook, is actually billed as a tagine, a savory Moroccan stew. Tagines also refer to the earthenware cooking and serving dishes for the stew, which are conical in shape and with an air vent at the top to assist with slow, even cooking. I actually have a brand new tagine which I was too afraid to use for this dish, wanting to try out the stew first with equipment that most people would have. Next time I'll brown the meat and vegetables first, and then let everything slow cook in the tagine. Slow cooking, at a low, even temperature is important for the lamb shoulder to become tender. If any of you are familiar with tagine cookware and would be willing to offer me some tips, please do so in the comments.

As to this stew, it was delicious, a wonderful blend of hot and sweet. We gobbled the leftovers up for lunch.

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Spicy Lamb Stew Recipe

Ingredients

2-3 lbs of lamb shoulder stew meat, cut into 1½-inch cubes
Olive oil
3/4 cup white wine
2 yellow onions, chopped
4 cloves garlic, minced
2 red bell peppers, chopped
2 dry pasilla chiles, chopped, stems and most seeds removed
1 Tbsp hot Hungarian paprika*
1½ teaspoon ground cumin
Pinch of ground cardamon
1½ cups chicken stock
14 oz of canned whole tomatoes, put through a food mill, or puréed**
8-10 sprigs fresh flat leaf parsley
4-5 sprigs of thyme
1 bay leaf
1/3 cup golden raisins
1/3 cup currants
Salt and pepper

* Hot Hungarian paprika is not the regular Hungarian paprika which is sweet and mild. I taste tested hot paprika with cayenne and found it even hotter than cayenne. If you don't have access to hot paprika, I would advise substituting 1/2 with sweet paprika and 1/2 with chili powder.

Method

** The original recipe calls for a pound of plum tomatoes, cut and roasted for 45 minutes in the oven at 375°F, and then put through a food mill. Given that at the time of this writing plum tomatoes are out of season, I opted for using canned.


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1 Pat the lamb dry with a paper towel. Drying the lamb this way first will help the lamb pieces brown. Heat a tablespoon of olive oil in a large, heavy, high-sided skillet over medium high heat. When the skillet is hot, add the lamb pieces in batches, being careful not to crowd them. Cook, turning as needed so that the lamb pieces brown evenly on all sides, for 6-8 minutes. Transfer to a bowl. Pour off excess oil over the lamb.

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2 Return skillet to medium hight heat. Add wine to skillet and stir with a spatula to release any meat bits that have stuck to the pan. Cook for 2-3 minutes and pour over the lamb.

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3 Return the skillet to medium heat and add a tablespoon of olive oil. Add the onions and garlic and cover and cook for 5 minutes, or until tender. Add the bell pepper and pasilla chiles and cook uncovered for 20 minutes until tender.

4 Make a bouquet garni by placing the parley, thyme and bay leaf in the center of a doubled over cheesecloth square. Gather the ends and secure with kitchen string. Set aside.

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5 Stir in the paprika, cumin, and cardamom and cook for a minute. Add the puréed (or cooked tomatoes put through a food mill) tomatoes, lamb, chicken stock, raisins, currants, and bouquet garni. Bring to a boil over high heat, decrease heat to low. Cook, partially covered, for about 3 hours, or until lamb is tender.

Season to taste with salt and pepper.

Serve over couscous or rice (wheat-free option).

Serves 4-6.

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12 Comments

Oh, yum! I love tagines, especially when they're served in the earthenware dish. In terms of cooking in it, I have yet to purchase one, so I can't tell you for sure. There was a thread about this on the Chocolate & Zucchini forum a while ago if you want to take a look at it. http://chocolateandzucchini.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=235
Hope this helps!

Posted by: Lady Amalthea on March 5, 2006 8:15 PM

yummy! Tagine is indeed a great cook ware..simple and nice

Posted by: foodcrazee on March 6, 2006 12:39 AM

This sounds very similar to a lamb dish I love from the Frugal Gourmet Cooks Our Immigrant Ancestors, a very old cookbook but one of my favorites. Yours sounds just wonderful. I went to Morocco once, one of the most interesting places I've visited.

Posted by: Kalyn on March 6, 2006 5:38 AM

This sounds delicious. And it's the second lamb stew recipe I received in my inbox today. I think somebody's trying to tell me something (like use up all that lamb stew meat in the freezer already!) : )

Posted by: farmgirl on March 6, 2006 9:24 AM

Sounds delicious! Might I ask where you bought the tagine? I've been wanting to get one for years but haven't gotten around to it. Is there a way to make sure the tagine has been glazed with non-toxic materials?

Posted by: Shelly on March 6, 2006 4:14 PM

Hi Lady - thanks for the C&Z link, that was quite helpful.

Kalyn - tell us more about Morocco! I'll be looking for that post on your blog.

Hi Farmgirl - must be all those new baby lambs you've been showing us.

Hi Shelly - I got mine from Le Souk, the Tunisian importer. You can find them at Sur La Table, and online. Here's a link to buy them online: http://fantes.com/tagine.htm.

I did just notice that my tagine does not have a vent at the top; it is closed. Don't know why, but I've sent an email to Le Souk asking about it.

Posted by: Elise Author Profile Page on March 6, 2006 4:44 PM

Hey!

I made this recipe in a slow cooker on Saturday night for our Easter Sunday feast.

I followed all of the directions up until I needed to cook it for 3hrs. I also used the 1/2 paprika, 1/2 chili powder mixture.

Instead, I heated up the slow cooker first (by putting water in it, and turning it on), and then I heated up the chicken broth in a separate pot, and then when the slow cooker was nice and hot, I poured out the water, poured in the chicken broth and all of the other ingredients from the recipe that had been simmering in a large pot. Then I put my slow cooker on HIGH for 3.5 hours and BOY WAS IT TASTY! The meat was simply falling apart!!

We served it with some Basmati Saffon Rice, some Tomatoes Stuffed with Tabouleh Salad, and some Dolmas.

We will definitely make this again. It is truly delicious!

Posted by: mscocolove on April 17, 2006 1:43 PM

I have made this recipe a number of times and it is one of my favorite things to make and eat. Mine always tends to look much darker than the picture above, but it is absolutely delicious.

Posted by: David Holtz on October 29, 2006 3:32 AM

This is the 1st recipe I ever made from your website and when trying to impress my fiance. It was a big hit and I haven't made it again yet but I am going to next week. You have too much stuff on here to make this often :)

Posted by: Anna on February 1, 2008 4:43 PM

MMMMM so good. I am eating this right now! I finally made it again, this time I used a leg of lamb because that is what I had and I doubled the recipe. It is amazingly delicious. Also last time I had no pasilla chilies but I do this time. I love the multifaceted flavor of this dish, it is not as spicy as one would think, and the heat definatley comes down with cooking. It has this gentle heat with sweet undertones. It does not leave a burn in your mouth at all. Sooooo yummy. I served it with plain rice b/c hubby hates couscous ...

Posted by: Anna on February 24, 2008 1:29 PM

So, I have been noticing that a variety of stew recipes call for browning the meat, and I got to wondering why? All the recipes call for drying and browning the meat, I know the meat must be dry to brown properly but I am confused as to why this is necessary, Elise, i am sure you know the answer, please tell me!

Simple answer. Browned meat tastes better. The reason? When the meat reaches a certain temperature, a variety of chemical reactions take place that produce many wonderful flavors. Sort of like the new flavors that happen when you cook sugar until it browns, or caramelizes. In the case of meat, it's not caramelization, but browning from a chemical process called a Maillard reaction. When the surface of the meat is damp, the water keeps the meat from getting to the temperature needed to brown the meat. Water boils away above 212 degrees. Maillard reactions happen at about 310°F. So as long as the meat is still wet, it can't get hot enough to brown, instead it cooks by being steamed or boiled. This is why with a stew, you brown the meat first. Then you add liquid. ~Elise

Posted by: Anna on June 23, 2008 7:27 PM

I made this stew last night and it was delicious. Thanks for the many wonderful recipes. You make me look great when it comes to working in the kitchen! Oh yea, have a great holiday.

Posted by: Claudia on December 16, 2008 6:31 AM

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