Shoulder of Lamb a la Boulangere
This recipe is one I made from Culinaria France,
a beautiful cookbook celebrating the regional cuisines of France
(ISBN 3-8290-2019-8). L'epaule d'agneau de Paulliac, rotie boulangere
- a shoulder of lamb cooked baker's style - is probably one of
those recipes that comes from the days when not everyone had an
oven and so a dish would be taken along to the baker's and put
in his oven after he had finished his bread baking.
This is a nice rustic dish that is easy to prepare
- particularly if you have a mandoline for slicing the potatoes.
However, a good sharp knife with do just as well.
Shoulder of lamb baker's style
1kg
potatoes
1/2 onion
40g butter
40g smoked bacon
1 bay leaf
200ml chicken stock
2 small shoulders lamb (I used one medium boned, rolled, tied shoulder of lamb)
1 head garlic
3 sprigs fresh thyme
coarse sea salt
Preheat the oven to 200C. Peel the potatoes,
wash and pat dry and peel into 2-3mm slices. Slice the onion
half and dice the bacon.
Saute the onion rings in the butter until golden.
Add the potatoes, diced bacon, and bay leaf and pour over the
stock. Pre-cook in the oven for about 30 minutes then remove and
place on one side.
Preheat the oven to 240C. Bake the shoulder of
lamb for about 45 minutes, adding the garlic after 20 minutes.
Return the potatoes to the oven after another 10
minutes.
Place the thyme on top of the meat 5 minutes before
the end of cooking time.
Arrange the lamb and potatoes on a serving dish,
pour over the juices and season with salt.
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