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Ausfish Bronze Member
Slow cooked leg of lamb
The night before;
Make deep cuts into leg and stuff with Garlic and Anchovies.
You will notice a bottle of Italian dressing, That is for basting the meat after the meat has cooked for a few hours. Use your thumb to push in the garlic and anchovies to get them right down
(I did clean my thumb nail of anchovie for the pic but some still remained)
Next the rub, I make my own and also use store bought ones.
This one has a mix of store bought Greek seasoning, Roast rub and a very light sprinkle of my own Paprika/chilly/garlic/Onion/Brown sugar mix.
Now cover and leave overnight in the BEER fridge, This will save your marriage as I can attest every time I go for a new coldy tonight.
The wife wont like it in "Her" fridge.
Tomorrow I expect to start the Webber up at around 6am
Start to cook at about 7am.
Next post will be about getting the correct temp and how I monitor the meat temp and the oven temp.
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Ausfish Addict
Re: Slow cooked leg of lamb
what time you intend to pull it off the bbq?
mike
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Ausfish Premium Member
Re: Slow cooked leg of lamb
I have to ask...why the garlic and anchovies..good lamb is tasty enough without anything else added to it ??
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Owner
Re: Slow cooked leg of lamb
Anchovies are great with lamb, be it roast or rack of lamb. It adds salt and the anchovie fishy taste is only slight.
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Ausfish Bronze Member
Re: Slow cooked leg of lamb
I started at cooking at 9am, Im about to pull it off at 5.30pm,
It looks the goods
The reason for anchovies is when you slow cook, a lot of salt (Flavour) is extracted from the meat. Adding salt(Anchovies) and rubs maintain the salt content and therefore , Flavour.
You cannot taste the anchovies after that amount of ours cooking.
After dinner I will finish the post
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Ausfish Bronze Member
Re: Slow cooked leg of lamb
The leg was spotted in Coles, after fumbling through I found one with clear red meat right through the cut end, and a consistent and fine marbling throughout.
Now to the smoking.
Early morning (before 9am) I started the Webber with 17 heatbeads on the one side.
Let them burn till ashed, place lid on and monitor temp.
You will need a temp gage with a 2" probe available from BBQ shops (2 inch probe).
Today was great as 17 heat beads showed up 120 oC at the top of the webber exhaust hole.
Place joint on opp side of heat beads with a pan of water underneath.
The temp will be lower at the grill level so you must maintain 120deg at the top.
If its too hot close the bottom air venta bit or take out some beads. Not hot enough? Add a few more beads.
Now add a chunk of hickory wood on top of beads. dont bother soaking as it will only put your beads out and play havoc with maintaining 120 deg at the top.
Check every 15min for the first 45mins to make sure temp is stable at 120 deg.
After 2 hrs place a new hickory chunk and baste with Italian salad dressing for the first time. Also add a few more heat beads.
Do this every hour then on until the fifth hour were I stop placing hickory chunks.
Now it just a matter of basting with the Italian salad dressing and adding heat beads to maintain that magic 120 deg at the top. I check it every hour.
The meat temp needs to be slowly brought up to about 80 degrees and this can take a long time for it to move past 60 deg. DONT make it hotter to quicken the reaching of the 80 deg mark.
It will get there as long as you maintain 120Deg at the top.
I use a set temp probe placed at the start and also a another one for testing at various places of the joint as It cooks.
With this one, It took 8 1/2 hours then removed, wraped in foil and laid to rest with clean T towls over the top for 15 mins.
With 5-6 hours of smoking this will have a red ring on the surface layer of meat.
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Ausfish Bronze Member
Re: Slow cooked leg of lamb
Last edited by flybloke; 31-05-2009 at 07:51 PM.
Reason: pics
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Ausfish Bronze Member
Re: Slow cooked leg of lamb
Some more that didn't come through
Last edited by flybloke; 31-05-2009 at 07:56 PM.
Reason: pic probs
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Ausfish Bronze Member
Re: Slow cooked leg of lamb
The salad is small pieces of roasted and caramelised pumpkin left to cool and then tossed into a normal green salad with a sprinkle of toasted pine seeds and avocado sliced over the top.
Our preferred dressing for this is French dressing.
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Ausfish Platinum Member
Re: Slow cooked leg of lamb
And if you can get hold of Tassie lamb, get it, the best there is!
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Ausfish Silver Member
Re: Slow cooked leg of lamb
Hi Flybloke,
Thanks for your effort with recipie and instructions.
Do you have problems with fumes affecting the meat from adding fresh beads to the cooking meat or do you pre heat the additional beads in a pre heating chimney?
Adam
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Ausfish Bronze Member
Re: Slow cooked leg of lamb
I use the heat bead brand and I cannot tell the difference of pre heating or just throwing a few on cold.
I think they throw off fumes at every stage of there burning.
I used to do it (pre heat) But came to the conclusion that a few beads on a already very hot surface tend to just start burning. There is no naked (Cool) flame trying to start up a bunch at once where I do notice the fume smell.
So, to answer, I ash over the initial pile then place meat. I do throw on more during cooking and cannot taste or smell any kero or fumes.
We had seconds tonight and it was just as tender as last night, the smoke flavour had mellowed and was great.
Normally day old roast lamb is best for cold sangers or shepherds pie.
Not so when its smoked, It keeps and stays tender.
I also use the coconut shell brickets that are basically just carbon, They throw bugger all fume and burn hot and long (Bunnings)
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Ausfish Addict
Re: Slow cooked leg of lamb
what size was the leg you used (kg).
Is the time of cooking using this method determined by the size of the joint?
Do you have fights over who gets the shank?
(am lining up the webber to try this one very soon)
Greg
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Ausfish Bronze Member
Re: Slow cooked leg of lamb
Sounds excellent Flybloke.
Just let me know what time you want us over next time you cook that one.
And here i was thinking I put a lot of effort into my cooking
Well Done
Rod
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Ausfish Gold Member
Re: Slow cooked leg of lamb
Thanks for the directions. Will be doing my first slow cooked lamb or pork for the long weekend. Looks mighty tasty. Great job mate
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