This is a different way of doing Lamb Shanks, by cooking the white wine, herbs and vegetables together it adds a fresher taste to a much loved cut of meat. Serve with creamy Mustard mash. Great Sunday lunch or having people over.
Serves 2
INGREDIENTS:
2 Lamb Shanks (from a quality Butchers)
4 Sprigs of Rosemary
2 Sprigs of fresh Thyme
10 Sage Leaves
70g Butter
6 Cloves of Garlic, Unpeeled
1 Large Carrot, peeled and finely sliced
1 Leek, washed, halved, and finely sliced
1 large Glass of White Wine
1 Onion, peeled and finely sliced
Sea Salt
Ground pepper
Mustard Mash
6 large White Potato's, peeled and chopped
Dijon Mustard
Olive Oil
Sea Salt
Ground Pepper
WHAT TO DO:
Turn the oven to 200c. Pick the leaves off 2 sprigs of rosemary, the thyme and 8 sage leaves, put in a food mixer with the butter. season with salt and pepper and blitz together.
Using a small knife, slide the knife up the bone and make a whole. Take some of the whizzed up butter and push it into the pockets you've just made. This will flavour the shanks right to the core.
Tear off 2 arms-length sheets of tin foil. Divide the sliced veg between the two and add the garlic and remaining sage leaves, making a pile in the middle of each sheet.
Rub the lamb Shanks with olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Place the shanks on top of the pile of veg, adding the rosemary and the thyme to each pile. Carefully pull up the tin foil around the shank and pour half the wine into each parcel. Then gather the foil around the bone of the shank, and pinch together tightly.
Place both shank parcels on a baking tray, with the bones facing up (see picture). Put them into the preheated oven for 2 1/2hrs (for a fan assisted oven), until the meat is tender.
Handy Hint:
Check the parcels after 1 1/2hrs to make sure the liquid has not evaporated. If needed add more wine.
Mustard Mash:
With half an hour of the lamb cooking time left, put the potatoes into a pan of boiling water, cook until soft when prodded with a knife.
Once cooked, drain the potatoes and put them back in the pan. Pour a good glug of Olive oil into the pan and breakdown with a potato masher (you can also use a potato ricer if you have one, easy and same results).
Once mashed up, take a strong wooden spoon and mix the mash until smooth (you will have to put some effort into this as you want NO lumps and to be creamy). Once the potato is smooth, mix in about 3/4 teaspoon of mustard (depending on your how mustardy you want it) and mix together well.
Plate up each Lamb Shank with the veg and the juices, spooning on some mash on the side.
Recipe by Jamie Oliver
Photos by Rach Grice
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