Lamb lovers rejoice! Here’s the ultimate recipe for grilling boneless leg of lamb.
In North Africa, especially Morocco, the Islamic cooking is refined, influenced heavily by settlers from France, Spain, and even Jewish culture.
In Morocco, Mechoui means “roasted on an open fire.” Lamb is the most common animal used for mechoui, although the term can be used for other animals and even vegetables. Lamb is usually roasted on a spit, and often the cavity is filled with organ meats, herbs, or fruits.
Mechoui is frequently served for Eid al-Adha, the Islamic holiday that commemorates the story from the Koran (and the Old Testament) of Ibrahim (Abraham), who was asked by his god to sacrifice his son Ishmael (Isaac) as a test of his devotion. At the last minute, as Ibrahim was about to consummate the sacrifice, god told him to stop, a lamb (or ram) appeared nearby, and was offered instead.
Today “The Feast of the Slaughter of the Lamb” is celebrated in most Islamic households, usually in November. When possible, a lamb is slaughtered the day of the feast.
Instead of a whole a whole lamb, a leg of lamb will feed at least a dozen hungry guests. This meat is marinated overnight in charmoula, a typical North African sauce and marinade. It is then sprinkled with ras el hanout, a dry spice mix also common to the region, grilled, and served with harissa, a classic hot pepper paste.
You can roast the whole leg on the grill with the bone in, but that’s hard to carve. Bone gets in the way. You can remove the bone and tie up the meat with string and slice it thin when it’s done. That’s very nice, but there’s not a lot of surface for the marinade to penetrate, trussing it is tricky, and it can take hours to cook. I prefer to cut the leg into large chunks, about 2″ square, and grill them quickly with the lid open so they are crispy outside and red and tender and juicy inside. You can skewer them, but metal skewers get hot and cook the meat on the inside. I just make large chunks and grill them.
Makes:
Takes:
Ingredients
- 1 leg of lamb (about 4 pounds per leg)
- 4 tablespoons ras el hanout spice mix
- 1 ยฝ cups charmoula herb paste
- ยฝ cup harissa hot pepper paste
These recipes were created in US Customary measurements and the conversion to metric is being done by calculations. They should be accurate, but it is possible there could be an error. If you find one, please let us know in the comments at the bottom of the page
Method
- Prep. Have your butcher remove the bone from the leg and cut off about 6-8" (15 - 20 cm) of the shank. Freeze the shank for later use. If you get the leg bone still in, you can cut off the shank with a saw and remove the bone with a filleting knife. Remove the thick fat cap, the thin silverskin membrane, and any tendons, sinew, and cartilage while you take the meat apart. I try to remove muscles intact and cut them up into large chunks. Inevitably you will end up with chunks of varying sizes. Group them according to size so you can cook each size for a different lenght of time. Or you can freeze one group for later. Put the meat in a nonreactive pan and cover all surfaces with charmoula. Marinate up to 24 hours if possible. An hour will do, but longer is better.
- Fire up. Preheat the grill as hot as you can get it. Sprinkle the ras el hanout on the meat generously, but not thick.
- Cook. Grill on one side until it releases from the grate easily and gets good grill marks. Roll it onto the opposite side and take the temp of several pieces immediately. Small pieces will cook fast, and grills have hotspots, so test many pieces. Use this Food Temperature Guide to decide when to take it off. I usually pull it at 125-130ยฐF (52-54ยฐC) for rare meat.
- Serve. Serve with couscous and harissa sauce on the side.
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