List of lamb dishes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lamb chops with new potatoes and green beans

This is a list of lamb and mutton dishes and foods. Lamb and mutton are terms for the meat of domestic sheep (species Ovis aries) at different ages. A sheep in its first year is called a lamb, and its meat is also called lamb. The meat of a juvenile sheep older than one year is hogget; outside North America this is also a term for the living animal.[1] The meat of an adult sheep is mutton, a term only used for the meat, not the living animal.

Meat from sheep features prominently in several cuisines of the Mediterranean. Lamb and mutton are very popular in Central Asia and in India, where other red meats may be eschewed for religious or economic reasons. It is also very popular in Australia. Barbecued mutton is also a specialty in some areas of the United States (chiefly Owensboro, Kentucky) and Canada.

Lamb dishes[]

Aloo gosht is a meat curry in North Indian cuisine. It consists of potatoes ("aloo") cooked with meat ("gosht"), usually lamb or mutton, in a stew-like shorba gravy.[2][3]
Fårikål is a traditional Norwegian dish consisting of mutton with bone, cabbage, whole black pepper and often a little wheat flour. It's traditionally served with potatoes boiled in their jackets.
Jameed consists of hard dry laban (yogurt) made from sheep's milk or goat's milk.
Kuurdak is a traditional meat dish in Central Asia. It's usually made from mutton
Lamb fries are lamb testicles us.ed as food, and are served in a variety of cuisines.
Lechazo is a Spanish dish made from "cordero lechal", the meat from unweaned lamb
Lamb paomo
Squab pie ingredients, prior to the addition of pie pastry
  • AbgooshtIran
  • Alinazik kebabTurkey
  • Aloo gosht – Northern Indian Subcontinent
  • ArrosticiniAbruzzo, Central Italy
  • Beşbarmaq – Common among Turkic peoples in Central Asia
  • Beyti kebabTurkey
  • Biryani – Indian Subcontinent
  • – Aegean Sea region; popular in both Greece and Turkey.
  • Cağ kebabıTurkey
  • CawlWales
  • Ćevapi – Common throughout the Balkans
  • ChakapuliGeorgia
  • ChanakhiGeorgia
  • ChegdermehTurkmenistan
  • Colocasia with lambCyprus
  • Colonial gooseNew Zealand
  • Corn poppy with lamb – Aegean Sea region; popular in both Greece and Turkey.
  • Curry – Indian Subcontinent
  • DalchaHyderabad, Southern India
  • Devilled kidneysEngland
  • Dhansak – Indian Subcontinent; originated by the Parsi community.
  • Doner kebabTurkey
  • DrobRomania
  • Ema-datshi – Bhutan
  • FahsaYemen, also popular in Turkey.
  • FårikålNorway
  • FenalårNorway
  • Fennel with lamb – Aegean Sea region; popular in both Greece and Turkey.
  • GheimehIran
  • GrjúpánIceland
  • HaneethYemen
  • HaggisScotland
  • HangikjötIceland
  • Instant-boiled muttonChina
  • Irani mutton – Iran
  • JalamahSaudi Arabia
  • JameedJordan
  • JingisukanHokkaido, Japan. Unique in that it is inspired and named for what Japanese people traditionally suspected Mongolian food to be like.
  • KabsaYemen
  • Kasha Mangsho – Indian subcontinent
  • Kabuli PalawAfghanistan
  • Kairi ka do pyazaHyderabad, southern India
  • Kamounia – North Africa
  • Kebab – Various; found throughout the Middle East
  • KhorkhogMongolia
  • Kibbeh nayyeh – a national dish of Lebanon, prepared with raw lamb or beef, fine bulgur and spices
  • Kokoretsi – Turkish; found throughout the Balkans and Azerbaijan
  • Kol böreğiTurkey
  • Kuurdak – Central Asia
  • Laal maansRajasthan, India
  • LahndiAfghanistan
  • Lamb chop – Various; found around the world.
  • Lamb fries – Various; found around the world. In the United States, they are most commonly found in Kentucky.
  • Lamb in Chilindrón – Spain
  • Lamb's fry – Found in various English-speaking nations; the recipe and definition varies according to locality.
  • Lancashire hotpotLancashire, northern England.
  • LechazoSpain
  • Lunggoi KatsaTibet
  • MaconScotland
  • Mallow with lamb – Aegean Sea region; popular in both Greece and Turkey
  • MandiYemen
  • Mansaf – Various Arab nations
  • Méchoui – North Africa
  • MixioteMexico
  • Moussaka – Various; found throughout the Balkans and the Middle East
  • Murtabak – Arab; found throughout the Islamic world, especially in Islamic Southeast Asia
  • Mutton pulao – Indian Subcontinent
  • Naan qaliaIndia
  • NavarinFrance
  • PaomoChina; found in the Shaanxi region
  • Pasanda – Indian Subcontinent
  • Pieds paquetsFrance; found in the southeast
  • PinchitosSpain; found in Andalusia and Extremadura
  • PinnekjøttNorway
  • Pleşcoi sausagesRomania
  • PowsowdieScotland
  • Qeema – Indian Subcontinent
  • Quzi – Various Arab nations; popular in the Levant and in Iraq.
  • Rack of lamb – Various Western nations
  • RibberullNorway
  • Roast lamb with laver sauceWales
  • Rogan joshJammu and Kashmir, India
  • SaleegSaudi Arabia
  • SajjiPakistan
  • SarburmaUkraine; invented by Crimean Tatars
  • Scotch brothScotland
  • Scotch pieScotland
  • Scouse – Either England or Norway
  • SfihaLebanon
  • Sha ShingbeeTibet
  • Sheep's trotters – Various
  • Shuwaa – Various Arab nations; popular in the Levant
  • Shepherd's pieUnited Kingdom
  • SkerpikjøtFaroe Islands
  • SkilpadjiesSouth Africa
  • SmalahoveNorway
  • SoddNorway
  • SosatieSouth Africa
  • Squab pie – prepared with mutton and apples – England
  • Stuffed intestinesLebanon
  • SviðIceland
  • Särä – Finland
  • Tavë kosiAlbania
  • Tomato bredieSouth Africa
  • TripouxFrance
  • WazwanKashmir

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ OED "Hogget"; The term 'hogget' was only added to the U.S. National Agricultural Library's thesaurus in 2009
  2. ^ Mohiuddin, Yasmeen Niaz (2007). Pakistan: A Global Studies Handbook. ABC-CLIO. p. 325. ISBN 978-1851098019.
  3. ^ Wickramasinghe, Priya; Rajah, Carol Selva (2005). Food of India. Murdoch Books. p. 124. ISBN 9781740454728.
  4. ^ "Førjulsmat for tøffinger" [Pre-Christmas food for the brave] (in Norwegian). Opplysningskontoret for egg og kjøtt. Archived from the original on 3 September 2012. Retrieved 9 November 2011.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""