This slow-cooking meal is perfect for cooler weather and worth every minute of the wait.
Forks Up!
Serves 4-6
Ingredients
4 tablespoons grapeseed oil
4 pounds lamb shanks, cut into 1 ½-2 inch sections
2 medium onions peeled rough-cut
3 carrots washed, medium rough-cut, bottom removed
5 cloves garlic rough, chopped fine
1 cup red wine (not cooking wine)
1 can 14 ounce peeled plum tomatoes
1 cup beef stock or chicken stock
2 teaspoons fresh rosemary or 1 teaspoon dried
1 bay leaf
1 teaspoon red wine vinegar
1 tablespoon salt (sea or kosher)
1 teaspoon black pepper
1 pound Yukon gold potatoes, washed and placed in whole
Directions
- Heat oven to 200 F.
- Season the shanks with salt and pepper.
- Place 2 tablespoons of oil in a large casserole dish or Dutch oven over medium-high heat.
- Place shanks in the pan and brown on all sides in batches; do not over crowd the pan.
- Once shanks are brown, remove from the pan. Add more oil if necessary for next step.
- Add the onions, carrots and garlic to the pan. Reduce the heat and cook for 2 to 3 minutes.
- Add the wine and scrape the bottom of pan to loosen up the brown bits. Add the remaining ingredients, including the lamb shanks.
- Bring to a simmer, cover and place in the oven. Cook until the shanks are tender and the potatoes are
done, at least 2 hours. - Adjust seasoning and serve.
OPTIONAL: To create a sauce, remove the shanks, bay leaf and the potatoes from the pan. Place the vegetables and the liquid in a blender and slowly blend. Season to taste and serve.
Visit the BlackDoctor.org Healthy Weight Loss center for more recipes.
Chef Woods has over 25 years in the hospitality business as a chef, author, television host, restauranteur, corporate spokesperson, foodologist and now blogger. For the past 10 years, Chef Woods has been dropping knowledge on America on how to live better through food and diet, from kicking off Michelle Obama’s “Let’s Move” campaign to traveling around the country speaking and performing cooking demonstrations. Chef Woods is on a mission to educate about better food choices, better cooking techniques and change the African American unhealthy paradigm one meal at a time.