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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Many years ago I had what I believe was lamb shoulder at a Greek
resturant; I'm trying to duplicate what I had. I recall it was spherical shaped, about3" in diameter. I went to a local butcher and asked to see a lamb shoulder and he showed me something that looked like a leg of lamb. Can someone suggest where the descrepency between what I was expecting and what the butcher showed me might have been? - Mike |
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On Mar 6, 9:42*am, Michael Horowitz > wrote:
> Many years ago I had what I believe was lamb shoulder at a Greek > resturant; I'm trying to duplicate what I had. I recall it was > spherical shaped, about3" in diameter. > I went to a local butcher and asked to see a lamb shoulder and he > showed me something that looked like a leg of lamb. > Can someone suggest where the descrepency between what I was expecting > and what the butcher showed me might have been? - Mike Maybe you had lamb shank......like an osso bucco. |
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Michael Horowitz wrote:
> Many years ago I had what I believe was lamb shoulder at a Greek > resturant; I'm trying to duplicate what I had. I recall it was > spherical shaped, about3" in diameter. > I went to a local butcher and asked to see a lamb shoulder and he > showed me something that looked like a leg of lamb. > Can someone suggest where the descrepency between what I was expecting > and what the butcher showed me might have been? - Mike From my experience in Greek restaurants, it was probably a rolled shoulder roast. Unlike leg of lamb, it tends to have a lot more fat on it. While legs usually have some fat on the outside, the shoulders tend to have thick veins of fat within. ImStillMags suggested that it might have been shanks, but you didn't mention anything about bones, and again from my experience, Greek restaurants are more into roasting than braising. |
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On Sat, 06 Mar 2010 13:29:08 -0500, Dave Smith
> wrote: >Michael Horowitz wrote: >> Many years ago I had what I believe was lamb shoulder at a Greek >> resturant; I'm trying to duplicate what I had. I recall it was >> spherical shaped, about3" in diameter. >> I went to a local butcher and asked to see a lamb shoulder and he >> showed me something that looked like a leg of lamb. >> Can someone suggest where the descrepency between what I was expecting >> and what the butcher showed me might have been? - Mike > > > From my experience in Greek restaurants, it was probably a rolled >shoulder roast. Unlike leg of lamb, it tends to have a lot more fat on >it. While legs usually have some fat on the outside, the shoulders tend >to have thick veins of fat within. ImStillMags suggested that it might >have been shanks, but you didn't mention anything about bones, and again >from my experience, Greek restaurants are more into roasting than braising. I'd like to follow up on that. Is that a shoulder deboned and rolled/trussed? - Mike |
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Michael Horowitz wrote:
>> From my experience in Greek restaurants, it was probably a rolled >> shoulder roast. Unlike leg of lamb, it tends to have a lot more fat on >> it. While legs usually have some fat on the outside, the shoulders tend >> to have thick veins of fat within. ImStillMags suggested that it might >> have been shanks, but you didn't mention anything about bones, and again >>from my experience, Greek restaurants are more into roasting than braising. > > > I'd like to follow up on that. Is that a shoulder deboned and > rolled/trussed? - Mike I usually buy them deboned and rolled. |
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In article >,
Michael Horowitz > wrote: > Many years ago I had what I believe was lamb shoulder at a Greek > resturant; I'm trying to duplicate what I had. I recall it was > spherical shaped, about3" in diameter. > I went to a local butcher and asked to see a lamb shoulder and he > showed me something that looked like a leg of lamb. > Can someone suggest where the descrepency between what I was expecting > and what the butcher showed me might have been? - Mike I don't know what you ate at the restaurant or how it was prepared, but the lamb shoulders I cook consist of the shoulder blade, top of the front leg and some ribs. Miche -- Electricians do it in three phases |
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