Slow-roasted lamb

Fennel, sage, onion & merguez stuffing

Slow-roasted lamb

Serves Serves 12 with leftover meat
DifficultyNot too tricky
Nutrition per serving Plus
  • Calories 458 23%
  • Fat 28.5g 41%
  • Saturates 12.5g 63%
  • Sugars 1.3g 1%
  • Salt 0.7g 12%
  • Protein 30g 60%
  • Carbs 17.4g 7%
  • Fibre 1g -
Of an adult's reference intake
Recipe From

Together

By Jamie Oliver
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Ingredients

  • olive oil
  • 5 higher-welfare merguez sausages , (250g total)
  • 1 bunch of sage , (20g)
  • 2 small bulbs of fennel
  • 2 red onions
  • 250 ml white wine
  • 250 g sourdough bread
  • 3 kg higher-welfare lamb shoulder , bone in (see tip below)
  • 1 bulb of garlic
  • 2 heaped tablespoons plain flour
  • 1 tablespoon blackberry or blackcurrant jam
  • red wine vinegar
  • Green sauce , to serve (optional)
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Recipe From

Together

By Jamie Oliver
Tap For Ingredients

Method

This recipe works great as a stand-alone dish, but also as a component in Jamie’s Summery Feast from Together – see the full collection of menus here.

GET AHEAD For the stuffing, put a high-sided roasting tray (25cm x 30cm) on a medium-high heat with 2 tablespoons of olive oil. Squeeze the sausagemeat out of the skins straight into the pan, breaking it up with the back of a spoon. Let the sausage start to crisp up, stirring occasionally, then tear in the sage leaves. Trim the fennel, peel the onions, then roughly chop both, add to the tray, and cook on a medium heat for 20 minutes, or until soft and caramelized, stirring occasionally. Pour in the wine and let it completely cook away, then season to perfection, tasting and tweaking. Chop the bread into 2cm chunks and stir in, then turn the heat off and leave to cool completely.

Lay out the lamb on a clean work surface. Scrunch and spread the cold stuffing all over the meat, then roll it up, sealing the filling inside (if any falls out, just poke it back in at the ends once tied up). Cut yourself eight 60cm lengths of string, slide them underneath the lamb at regular intervals, then tie them up at the top. Wipe out the tray, chuck in the lamb bones, break apart and add the unpeeled garlic bulb, then sit the lamb on top. Cover and refrigerate overnight.

ON THE DAY Preheat the oven to full whack (240°C/475°F/gas 9). Get the lamb tray out of the fridge, rub the meat with a little olive oil, place in the oven, and turn the temperature down to 150ºC. Roast for 4 hours, or until tender, basting every hour with the tray juices and adding a splash of water each time. Remove from the oven and transfer the lamb to a serving platter. Cover with tin foil and a clean tea towel, and leave to rest for 1 hour. Use a spoon to skim the fat off the tray of bones (save it in a jar for tasty cooking another day). Put the tray over a medium heat on the hob and stir in the flour, jam and a swig of red wine vinegar, scraping up all the sticky bits from the base of the tray. Cook for a couple of minutes, then pour in 1.2 litres of water. Let it simmer on a low heat to the consistency of your liking, stirring occasionally. Pass the gravy through a sieve into a pan and season to perfection, tasting and tweaking. Simmer on the lowest heat until needed.

TO SERVE Uncover the lamb, spooning any resting juices into the gravy. Cut away the string, then spoon over the Green sauce. Take it to the table, ready to carve in front of your guests.

Tips

ASK YOUR BUTCHER: To debone the lamb, then slice into it so you can open it out like a book. Get them to break up the bones, too – epic gravy, incoming!

Recipe From

Together

By Jamie Oliver