In season

May produce

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Roast Lamb with Rosemary and Garlic

Roast Lamb with Rosemary and Garlic

Australia's Sunday lamb, the centre of the long-lunch table and the smell that fills the kitchen all afternoon. You stud a 2.2 kg bone-in leg with slivers of garlic and rosemary pushed deep against the meat, rub the whole thing with oil, salt and pepper, and start it in a very hot oven for twenty-five minutes to lock in a crust. The temperature drops to 180°C from there and the lamb roasts on until a probe in the thickest part reads 60°C internal for blushing pink. Then comes the part most home cooks skip and shouldn't: a twenty-five-minute rest while you build the gravy in the deglazed pan with stock, a spoon of redcurrant or quince jelly for sweetness, and a splash of red wine. The lamb carves into juicy, rose-coloured slices that fall away in long pieces from the bone. Roast potatoes, mint sauce, a green vegetable on the side, the wine you opened earlier already in the glass.

Australian 2 hours 50 minutes Serves6-8
Roast Leg of Lamb

Roast Leg of Lamb

The Sunday lamb of the British table, the centrepiece of an Easter lunch and the dish a mother-in-law judges you on. You bring a 2-2.5 kg bone-in leg to room temperature first (essential - cold meat into a hot oven cooks unevenly), score the fat, then stud the leg with slivers of garlic and tuck rosemary tips into the cuts. Smear with oil, salt and a paste of crushed garlic. The lamb starts hot to colour the skin, then drops to a low roast and pulls when a probe in the thickest part reads 55°C for pink or 60°C for medium. A full twenty-minute rest is non-negotiable; this is when the juices settle back into the meat and the slices stay pink rather than weeping grey. While it rests you build a simple jus from the pan drippings, deglazed with wine and reduced down. Roast potatoes, mint sauce, peas; a glass of claret in your hand and the family gathered.

British 3 hours 10 minutes Serves8