This is a list of lamb and mutton dishes and foods. Lamb and mutton are terms for the meat of domestic sheep (species Ovis aries) at different ages. A sheep in its first year is called a lamb, and its meat is also called lamb. The meat of a juvenile sheep older than one year is hogget; outside North America this is also a term for the living animal.[1] The meat of an adult sheep is mutton, a term only used for the meat, not the living animal.
Meat from sheep features prominently in several cuisines of the Mediterranean. Lamb and mutton are very popular in Central Asia and in India, where other red meats may be eschewed for religious or economic reasons. It is also very popular in Australia. Barbecued mutton is also a specialty in some areas of the United States (chiefly Owensboro, Kentucky) and Canada.
Lamb dishes
- Abgoosht – Iran
- Alinazik kebab – Turkey
- Aloo gosht – Northern Indian Subcontinent
- Arrosticini – Abruzzo, Central Italy
- Bakhsh – From the cuisine of the Bukharan Jews from Tajikistan and Uzbekistan as well as Afghan Jewry
- Beşbarmaq – Common among Turkic peoples in Central Asia
- Beyti kebab – Turkey
- Biryani – Indian Subcontinent
- Blessed thistle with lamb – Aegean Sea region; popular in both Greece and Turkey.
- Cağ kebabı – Turkey
- Cawl – Wales
- Ćevapi – Common throughout the Balkans
- Chakapuli – Georgia
- Chanakhi – Georgia
- Chegdermeh – Turkmenistan
- Colocasia with lamb – Cyprus
- Colonial goose – New Zealand
- Corn poppy with lamb – Aegean Sea region; popular in both Greece and Turkey.
- Curry – Indian Subcontinent
- Dalcha – Hyderabad, Southern India
- Devilled kidneys – England
- Dhansak – Indian Subcontinent; originated by the Parsi community.
- Doner kebab – Turkey
- Drob – Romania
- Ema-datshi – Bhutan
- Fahsa – Yemen, also popular in Turkey.
- Fårikål – Norway
- Fenalår – Norway
- Fennel with lamb – Aegean Sea region; popular in both Greece and Turkey.
- Gheimeh – Iran
- Grjúpán – Iceland
- Haneeth – Yemen
- Haggis – Scotland
- Hangikjöt – Iceland
- Instant-boiled mutton – China
- Irani mutton – Iran
- Jalamah – Saudi Arabia
- Jameed – Jordan
- Jingisukan – Hokkaido, Japan. Unique in that it is inspired and named for what Japanese people traditionally suspected Mongolian food to be like.
- Kabsa – Yemen
- Kasha Mangsho – Indian subcontinent
- Kabuli Palaw – Afghanistan
- Kairi ka do pyaza – Hyderabad, southern India
- Kamounia – North Africa
- Kebab – Various; found throughout the Middle East
- Khorkhog – Mongolia
- Kibbeh nayyeh – a national dish of Lebanon, prepared with raw lamb or beef, fine bulgur and spices
- Kokoretsi – Turkish; found throughout the Balkans and Azerbaijan
- Kol böreği – Turkey
- Kuurdak – Central Asia
- Laal maans – Rajasthan, India
- Lahndi – Afghanistan
- Lamb chop – Various; found around the world.
- Lamb fries – Various; found around the world. In the United States, they are most commonly found in Kentucky.
- Lamb in Chilindrón – Spain
- Lamb's fry – Found in various English-speaking nations; the recipe and definition varies according to locality.
- Lancashire hotpot – Lancashire, northern England.
- Lechazo – Spain
- Lunggoi Katsa – Tibet
- Macon – Scotland
- Mallow with lamb – Aegean Sea region; popular in both Greece and Turkey
- Mandi – Yemen
- Mansaf – Various Arab nations
- Méchoui – North Africa
- Mixiote – Mexico
- Moussaka – Various; found throughout the Balkans and the Middle East
- Murtabak – Arab; found throughout the Islamic world, especially in Islamic Southeast Asia
- Mutton pulao – Indian Subcontinent
- Naan qalia – India
- Navarin – France
- Paomo – China; found in the Shaanxi region
- Pasanda – Indian Subcontinent
- Pieds paquets – France; found in the southeast
- Pinchitos – Spain; found in Andalusia and Extremadura
- Pinnekjøtt – Norway
- Pleşcoi sausages – Romania
- Powsowdie – Scotland
- Qeema – Indian Subcontinent
- Quzi – Iraq.
- Rack of lamb – Various Western nations
- Ribberull – Norway
- Roast lamb with laver sauce – Wales
- Rogan josh – Jammu and Kashmir, India
- Saleeg – Saudi Arabia
- Sajji – Pakistan
- Sarburma – Ukraine; invented by Crimean Tatars
- Scotch broth – Scotland
- Scotch pie – Scotland
- Scouse – Either England or Norway
- Sfiha – Lebanon
- Sha Shingbee – Tibet
- Sheep's trotters – Various
- Shuwaa – Various Arab nations; popular in the Levant
- Shepherd's pie – United Kingdom
- Skerpikjøt – Faroe Islands
- Skilpadjies – South Africa
- Smalahove – Norway
- Sodd – Norway
- Sosatie – South Africa
- Squab pie – prepared with mutton and apples – England
- Stuffed intestines – Lebanon
- Svið – Iceland
- Särä – Finland
- Tavë kosi – Albania
- Tomato bredie – South Africa
- Tripoux – France
- Wazwan – Kashmir
- Rogan josh is an aromatic lamb dish native to the Indian subcontinent, and is one of the signature recipes of Kashmiri cuisine.
- Smalahove is a Western Norwegian traditional dish made from a sheep's head, originally eaten before Christmas.[4]
- Roast lamb from a roasting spit, served with potato and onion in Istria County, part of Croatian cuisine
See also
References
- ↑ OED "Hogget"; The term 'hogget' was only added to the U.S. National Agricultural Library's thesaurus in 2009
- ↑ Mohiuddin, Yasmeen Niaz (2007). Pakistan: A Global Studies Handbook. ABC-CLIO. p. 325. ISBN 978-1851098019.
- ↑ Wickramasinghe, Priya; Rajah, Carol Selva (2005). Food of India. Murdoch Books. p. 124. ISBN 9781740454728.
- ↑ "Førjulsmat for tøffinger" [Pre-Christmas food for the brave] (in Norwegian). Opplysningskontoret for egg og kjøtt. Archived from the original on 3 September 2012. Retrieved 9 November 2011.
External links
- Media related to Lamb dishes at Wikimedia Commons