My lamb shanks in red wine. Slow & tender :)

My lamb shanks in red wine. Slow & tender :)

Braised lamb shank served on creamy mashed potatoes on a white plate, set on a red tablecloth.
Braised lamb shank served on creamy mashed potatoes on a white plate, set on a red tablecloth.

Ingredients (4–6 servings)

  • 4–6 lamb shanks

  • Butter (a good knob)

  • Salt + freshly ground black pepper

  • 2–3 shallots

  • 8–12 garlic cloves

  • 1–1.5 bottles red wine

  • 2–3 dl veal stock (or beef stock)

  • 1–1.5 handfuls thyme

  • 1–1.5 handfuls rosemary

  • 1–1.5 lemons (a little freshly squeezed juice)

For the sauce

  • Butter-flour paste (beurre manié) or cornstarch slurry

  • A little cream

  • A little gastrique

How to make it

  1. Brown the shanks.
    Melt a good knob of butter on high heat in a large pot and brown the lamb shanks thoroughly on all sides. Season with salt and freshly ground pepper.

  2. Add shallots + garlic.
    Roughly chop the shallots. Peel the garlic and lightly crush the cloves under the knife. Add both to the pot with the lamb.

  3. Wine + herbs + lemon.
    Pour in the red wine. Add thyme and rosemary. Squeeze in a little lemon juice.

  4. Simmer, covered, 2½ hours.
    Put the lid on, turn the heat down, and let the lamb shanks simmer for about 2½ hours until they are completely tender.

  5. Rest the meat.
    Lift the shanks out carefully (the meat can fall apart). Place them on a nice serving platter. Cover with foil and then a tea towel.

  6. Reduce + thicken the sauce.
    Let the cooking liquid (“sky”) boil down a little. Thicken with a beurre manié.
    If the sauce gets too thick, add a little water or more veal stock.
    You can also thicken with cornstarch mixed with a little cold water.

  7. Finish with cream + seasoning + gastrique.
    Add a little cream, then taste and adjust with salt, pepper, and a little gastrique.

  8. Serve.
    Spoon a little sauce over the lamb shanks on the platter and serve the rest in a sauce bowl on the side.

Chef tips (only if you want it even better)

  • Dry the shanks before browning. Pat them dry with kitchen paper first. You get deeper browning and a richer sauce.

  • Don’t burn the butter. If your pot runs very hot, add a tiny splash of neutral oil with the butter. Same flavor, less risk.

  • Quick gastrique (worth it). In a small pan: melt 1 tbsp sugar until light caramel, add 1 tbsp vinegar (careful, it steams), stir, and add 1–2 tbsp of it to the sauce until it tastes “finished” (not sweet—just balanced).

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