All Day Lamb

  1. Have the butcher remove the bones from the lamb and tie it for you, if at all possible. Rub the lamb generously with salt, pepper, and olive oil, and set it aside to come to room temperature, about 1 hour. Heat a small amount of olive oil in a skillet and brown the meat very well on all sides. Do this slowly, it will probably take 15 minutes to get it well browned. If you have room in the pan, brown the bones as well as you can. If they don't fit, brown them separately after you remove the lamb. Stick the cloves into 4 of the shallots.
  2. Preheat the oven to 325u0b0. Line the bottom of a very large casserole with the pork skin, fat side down, if using, or oil it well.
  3. Put the meat, shallots, garlic, carrots, the browned bones, and the bouquet garni into the casserole. The shallots are especially delicious, so stuff in as many as you can. Pour the bottle of wine over all and cover the casserole tightly. Traditionally you'd seal the lid to the dish with a dough made of flour and water. I don't have a huge lidded casserole, and most people don't either these days, so I seal my casserole very tightly with heavy aluminum foil. You want to prevent any evaporation in the early stages of cooking.
  4. Place the casserole in the oven for 3-4 hours. After that time has passed, reduce the oven temperature to 275u0b0 and cook for another 3-4 hours. This dish is very flexible, so the time is elastic. If you need to remove the casserole from the oven for an hour to bake something delicious for dessert, just let the meat rest undisturbed on the counter. If you need to start it the night before, let it rest in the fridge overnight, and finish it the day you want to serve it, do that.
  5. For the final hour of cooking you want to have the dish uncovered. With a cup or ladle, scoop out as much of the sauce as you can, probably about 3 cups worth. Let the meat and vegetables continue to cook in the oven until well-bronzed. Let the sauce rest for half an hour, remove whatever fat has risen to the top, then boil the sauce gently for half an hour to reduce it to a smooth, pourable consistency.
  6. When you're ready to serve the main course, remove the bones and the bouquet garni from the dish, set the whole casserole directly on the table, and serve to your delighted guests with mashed potatoes whipped with creme fraiche and lots of butter, and a pitcher of the reduced sauce on the side. You will be able to eat this with a spoon, should you be so inclined. It's that tender.
  7. *Use something that's not too sweet, not too expensive, but definitely not dry, and definitely white. You might try the Hogue Late Harvest Riesling, for example. Drink a red with the finished dish, but cook with a white. Trust me.rnrn**In France this is called couenne, and is easy to find. It keeps the meat from sticking to the pot, and also adds an elusive richness to the sauce. You may be able to get pork skin at a Chinese grocery or other ethnic market. If you can't get pork skin, just oil the bottom of your dish.

lamb, late harvest white wine, pork skin, garlic, bouquet garni, cloves, carrots, shallots, salt

Taken from food52.com/recipes/3787-all-day-lamb (may not work)

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