My eldest daughter has, as they say in polite circles, some issues. She doesn’t like gravy. As if that’s not bad enough, she claims to like sauces, jeu and reductions. So, when I am preparing our regular Sunday family dinner, her expectations need to be managed. Beef with a pan reduction is wolfed down while beef with a pan gravy will be rejected out of hand. As if cooking for my extended family was not difficult enough! So, when I decided to serve them with a leg of lamb with anchovies, thyme and garlic and a rich gravy, I knew that there would be a sales job to be done.
To help the cause, I wheeled out a couple of extra ingredients. To make the gravy more sauce-like, I included mustard and honey. So, my latest Sunday family dinner creation now takes almost as long to type as it did to prepare – Roast Leg Of Lamb With, Anchovies, Garlic, Thyme, Wholegrain Mustard and Honey.
Side note on awkward family members: Eldest daughter gave me an earful about using anchovies. She said she didn’t want her lamb tasting of fish. I fluffed my response and may have left her with the impression that there would be no anchovies…
Ingredients
This list is more about quantities as most of the ingredients are in the name.
- 1 leg of Irish lamb (the best in the world)
- 4 cloves of quality garlic
- 1 handful of fresh thyme
- 1 tin of anchovies in oil
- 1 tablespoon of wholegrain mustard
- 1 tablespoon of honey
- Black pepper to season
- Smoked sea salt flakes
Side note on the ingredients list: Use top quality where you can. It really makes a difference. This doesn’t apply to the salt. Use any salt, I’m just making the recipe seem fancier than it is in reality.
Get a small sharp knife and cut the garlic into shards. Trim the thyme into little bunches. Drain and half the anchovies.
Stab the leg (the lamb, not your own) all over. Push the anchovies, garlic and thyme into the holes. This can be tricky as the anchovies are very delicate.
Mix the honey and mustard together. Season the Lamb with the black pepper and salt. Pour the honey mustard mixture over the lamb.
Put the lamb in a 180°C oven for an hour and twenty minutes (for medium rare). Take the Lamb out and place on a chopping board. Let it rest, covered in foil, for as long as it takes to make the gravy. Sorry, sauce, it is a sauce, not a gravy.
To make the sauce (gravy), add a couple of heaped teaspoons of plain flour to the roasting pan and stir to combine into a smooth paste.
Place it on a low heat on the stovetop. Add a glass of red wine and about a quarter litre of hot water. Stir until the whole thing combines into a silky gravy like sauce. Taste and adjust the seasoning. Pass it all through a sieve.
Carve the lamb and serve with lashings of sauce/gravy. Delicious.
Footnote on anchovies and lamb: Eldest daughter refused the sauce, having convinced herself it was a gravy. She really enjoyed the meal and had seconds and even thirds of the meat. She was not impressed when I later let her know that the anchovies were part of the dish. She never tasted the gravy / sauce. Her loss. It was a delight.
katechiconi | 5th December 2017
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So, do I have this straight? She likes sauce or jus but not gravy. Thing is, I’m not at all sure you can separate them that completely. In mu book, jus is just meat juice, sauce has other stuff and can be thickened. If your gravy was jus with thickening, would it be gravy, or still Just Jus? Ah, forget it, her loss is our gain. Or would be, if we were round to yours for Sunday lunch. I’d be slightly shaky on the anchovies myself, but they are a major source (sauce?) of umami, so why not?
Conor Bofin | Author | 5th December 2017
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A long time ago, I gave up trying to understand the workings of the female mind. I have enough trouble trying to work out my own thought processes. Love the source/sauce reference. Works really well if I put on an Aussie accent to say it!
Best,
C
Mad Dog | 5th December 2017
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I love gravy and a few anchovies make things taste savoury, not fishy. Your lamb looks delicious.
Conor Bofin | Author | 5th December 2017
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Unfortunately, once she has her mind made up….
I wonder where she gets it from?
Ron | 5th December 2017
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That is a fantastic looking leg of lamb and sauce or gravy looks so good. Funny, here in Sweden the English word “gravy” translates to sås. Don’t tell your daughter if she’s headed to Sweden.
We’re having roast leg of lamb for our Julfest, so your cook got me thinking. I’ve never tried anchovies in a leg of lamb, but why not. I usually use rosemary and garlic for the slit stuffing, but thyme would be interesting as well. Conor a question please, are you using bone-in or boned leg? Sure wish we could get Irish lamb here, you’ve convinced me it’s the best.
Conor Bofin | Author | 5th December 2017
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Bone I Ron. I find it more flavoursome and easier to carve. I have a friend from Wales who believes their lamb is better. However, they need all they can cling to over there, to make life in that God forsaken wilderness, worthwhile. I will get particular fun telling her about the sås.
Best,
C
ladyredspecs | 5th December 2017
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Nah, Aussie lamb from the green rollong hills of SE Australia is the best!
Linda Duffin | 5th December 2017
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It’s a funny old thing, gravy, and deeply divisive for something so apparently straightforward. Thick or thin; wine added, just the veggie water or the reductionist version of cooked-down pan juices; the plate swimming in the stuff or a judicious trickle. Personally I’ve never met a gravy I didn’t like, except for those weird granule things. I like the idea of using thyme instead of rosemary and I too have been guilty of truthful economy when it comes to anchovies. A delicious meal, in part or in whole. Lx
Conor Bofin | Author | 5th December 2017
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Hi Linda,
Youngest daughter is coming home from Canada for a few days at Christmas. She is insisting on roast rib of beef with Yorkshire pudding for Christmas dinner. She has a habit of filling the individual puddings with gravy. It is always, thick, beefy and glossy by the time I’m finished with it. Other daughter will have to put up with some butter on her potatoes. There will be no descriptive latitude on the 25th.
I am shocked at you mentioning the granule word in a gravy conversation!
Linda Duffin | 5th December 2017
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Granules? Only in the negative! My mum used them and I loathed them. Your younger daughter has the right idea, btw. Eldest will just have to have extra brandy butter on the pud. 🙂 xxx
Simon | 5th December 2017
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I know it’s weird, but I refuse to eat anything with raw tomato in it, to the point of claiming a potentially fatal allergy. They are disgusting and gross, and will likely make me retch violently. I’m hyper-sensitive to the raw tomato taste to the point where I will throw away a burger rather than eat it, if the server has forgotten/didn’t bother when asked for one without said red veg/fruit turd. I am however perfectly happy with tomato paste, tomato sauce, tinned tomatones once cooked etc. Love a pizza topping and a nice pasta sauce.
Kids are weird. And then we grow up. The jury is out as to whether that’s an improvement.
Conor Bofin | Author | 5th December 2017
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I love your admission Simon. The older I get, the less benefit I see in growing up. I am working at reversing the process, mentally as physically is a lost cause at this stage.
Marty | 5th December 2017
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I’ll have her gravy! 😉 This lamb looks amazing — so perfectly rosy. Garlic and anchovies are such a great pairing. I may or may not have been known to mash up some garlic, anchovies, good olive oil, and a little cracked pepper and used that as a spread on crostini. Next time, I’ll add a little thyme — that is, if I actually ate this. 😉
Conor Bofin | Author | 5th December 2017
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Thanks Marty,
One of the greatest pleasures at the dinner table is squeezing a clove of oven roasted garlic and adding the toothpaste like goo to one’s potatoes. Delightful, sweet flavour. Pouring some gravy over it really tops it off.
Best,
Conor
Mad Dog | 5th December 2017
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Ha ha – I wonder if it’s the flour in gravy she that doesn’t like?
I went to a Christmas lunch with friends many years ago, where they cooked a huge organic rib of beef. They siphoned off the juices to cook Yorkshire puddings and there was absolutely no gravy, not even Bisto! I was mortified, but at the end of the day, I love cooking and on Christmas day, I want to do be the chef.
ladyredspecs | 5th December 2017
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I kind of empanthise with your daughter, but then I was subjected to lumpy gloopy inspid tasting gravy on my Sunday roast when I was a kid. My Mum was a lousy cook, a vastly different cook to yours truly. Give me a jus any day!
Conor Bofin | Author | 30th December 2017
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I try to not produce any lumpy gloopy insipid tasting gravy Sandra. However, eldest has an aversion to anything called gravy. I will keep trying to fool/convince her until she comes into the light.
Eha | 5th December 2017
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Conor – I can see your elder daughter and myself getting along like a house on fire! Yes, I love jus and reductions, yes I adore making and eating a properly made sauce: mention the word ‘gravy; and it seems like a flour-ridden mess I would not let near my plate~ OK, OK, the female mind is a good excuse 🙂 ! No leg of lamb in immediate sight but just love your other ingredients and have some more one-person manageable pieces of the beast at home: can’t wait to try!!!! . . . . and do you really have to send the ‘Irish lamb is best’ message to THE sheep country . . . . . we can sadly see the truth just from the pictures . . . .
Conor Bofin | Author | 30th December 2017
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Hi Eha and apologies for the delay in replying. I have been under the weather for the past couple of weeks. I do believe that we produce the best lamb here in Ireland. It all has to do with the climate, topography and diet that combine to build in flavour. Apologies for the nationalism but in this case, I think I am right. I hope you enjoy your pieces as much as we enjoyed this leg. Happy New Year to you.
Stefan | 6th December 2017
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The Dutch translation for gravy is jus! To me gravy means watered down, so I don’t tend to prepare it and almost missed out on a great Indian dish with tomato gravy (which to my mind was tomato sauce!). Lamb with anchovies, thyme and garlic is always a winner. We get Dutch and NZ lamb here, no Irish.
Conor Bofin | Author | 30th December 2017
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Next time you are over, I will cook some Irish lamb for you and Kees (In ’18, I hope). Hopefully, your neutral position can help to settle the ‘best lamb in the world’ debate.
Mimi | 6th December 2017
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Ah, kids. My aren’t as picky, but one is a pescatarian. That is one gorgeous meal. My mother always stuck garlic clove halves into lamb. Haven’t seen it done by anyone until you!
Conor Bofin | Author | 30th December 2017
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If I have the lamb and the garlic, I find it hard to do anything else.
anotherfoodieblogger | 7th December 2017
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My eldest daughter doesn’t like gravy of any kind either. Wait, she’s my only daughter, oh, and my only child. Nonetheless, I cannot wrap my mind around not liking gravy made from the wonderful juices of an excellent cut of meat. What’s not to like? However, I am salivating over that gorgeous lamb and gravy. I want to reach through the screen and pluck out one of those garlic cloves too, mmmm.
Conor Bofin | Author | 30th December 2017
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Thanks Kathryn,
I hope you are not suffering too much with the weather I am reading about. Apologies for the response delay, I have been in the bed for the past couple of weeks. Getting back to normal now.
anotherfoodieblogger | 30th December 2017
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Yes, I did see on FB you have been under the weather. Actually, in my little neck of the PNW, it’s been unusually warm! Yesterday it got to 50 degrees F!! But back to seasonal temps today, although nice and sunny.
Conor Bofin | Author | 30th December 2017
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Glad to hear it. Enjoy it while it’s there.
Debbie Spivey | 7th December 2017
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What’s wrong with gravy!?!?!?! 😉
Conor Bofin | Author | 30th December 2017
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I am as dumbfounded as you Debbie.
Eha | 9th December 2017
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*smile* Debbie, methinks it is ‘the word’ and not ‘the substance’ to which many of us object. And somewhat that depends on our geography and lifestyle and experiences. In Australia Sandra of ‘Ladytredspecs’ gives a rather correct picture of ‘non-cooks’ making gravy and those who could, making jus or sauce or whatever !! I remember coming here as an immigrant child shocked that people used something called Gravox or salty gravy granules to make ‘brown gloop’ and actually ate it !! The feeling has ‘somewhat’ remained: gravy is ‘nasty’ for many of us 🙂 !! For you in country US the word simply has a different connotation . . .
Conor Bofin | Author | 30th December 2017
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The brown granules endure and some believe that when reconstituted, they constitute gravy. I shudder at the thought.