This grilled marinated lamb is full of garlic and rosemary flavor. All grilled to perfection and perfect served with a side of roasted potatoes. It’s perfect for Mother’s Day, Father’s Day and of course Easter.
I made this grilled lamb two days after Easter. I had originally bought it to slow roast in the oven overtop golden potatoes. In my brain the lamb was going to cook until pink perfection and the potatoes would be crispy and coated in delicious lamb juices.
So I pop on the oven to preheat, start an episode of Parts Unknown (Anthony Bourdain…swoon!) and start chopping my rosemary. I’m mincing away at my rosemary and I hear a weird sound. I give a side glance to my stove and see a bright light inside the oven. I open the door and the heating element on the bottom of the oven was on fire. Of course I immediately yell “Art! Get in the kitchen! The oven is one fire!” and some how in my hysterics remember I should probably shut the oven off. Art finally gets into the kitchen to see just a tiny baby flame sputter out and the heating element turn to dust and break in half.
I stood there. My mouth was open and my face was basically saying “What. The. Hell!” Except hell might have been replaced with a word that starts with F. Then tears starting streaming down my face as I look at Art and said “My lamb! What am I supposed to do about my lamb? I just bought that lamb and now it’s going to go to waste.” He gave me a hug, told me not to worry all while probably thinking “Ok drama queen…lets bring it down a notch.”
Then I come to my senses and exclaimed that we were off to buy a new oven. So we drove to Sears, Home Depot and Lowes. I finally settled on an oven, charged the thing (my credit card cried) and went to the diner for Easter dinner. If you’re wondering, I had a bacon cheeseburger with fries and Art had a rueben sandwich. Not exactly the traditional Easter food but it worked.
After all this excitement I finally posted to Facebook about my troubles. I was bummed about my lamb and didn’t really want to freeze it but knew it wouldn’t stay fresh in time for the new oven. Then my friend Lauren from the blog Healthy Delicious chimed in “Do you have a grill?” Ummmm why hadn’t I though to grill my lamb? I don’t know, I’m going to blame it on the stress but seriously as soon as she said that I knew it was going to get grilled up!
I did a really simple marinade of olive oil, lemon juice, rosemary, garlic and just a pinch of salt. I wanted to give the meat some flavor without totally masking all that lovely natural lamb flavor. Your cooking time on the grill will depend on your desired doneness (as you can see I like rare) and the thickness of your meat. I used a boneless leg of lamb and cut it into two hunks because it was easier to cook that way. Obviously the smaller portion cooked first but it was still perfect because it gave it time to rest.
I also think this grilled marinated lamb would be perfect for Mother’s Day because lamb totally yells spring to me. Trust me, your mom would love if you placed a platter of this deliciousness in front of her!
This grilled marinated lamb is full of garlic and rosemary flavor. All grilled to perfection and perfect served with a side of roasted potatoes. It's perfect for Mother's Day, Father's Day and of course Easter. Yield: 5 pound lamb Prep Time: 8 hours marinade time Cook Time: 20 minutes Total Time: 50 minutes plus marinade time Slightly adapted from Epicurious In mixing bowl whisk together olive oil, lemon zest, lemon juice, garlic, rosemary, salt and pepper. Add to a large 2 gallon ziptop bag (or large marinated bucket if you own one) and add in lamb. Move the lamb around in the back to make sure it's fully coated. Place the marinated lamb bag in a 9x13 dish and add to the fridge. The dish is there just in case the bag leaks. You don't want to clean marinade out of your fridge. Not a fun job - trust me! Let the lamb marinade for at least 8 hours. When you're ready to cook your lamb take it out of the fridge and let it sit at room temperature for about 1 hour. Get your grill up to medium heat and add on your lamb. For medium doneness you want to bring your lamb up to 130 degrees in the middle. This is the perfect time to have a meat thermometer handy. It's your best bet for truly knowing the doneness of the meat. Once your meat is cooked remove from the grill, add to platter, cover loosely with foil and let sit for at least 15 minutes. This helps keep the meat tender and juicy. Once your meat has rested slice it up and enjoy!Grilled Marinated Lamb
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Directions:
Kim
Wednesday 21st of May 2014
Love. Love. Love. Lamb is a family favorite. This marinade sounds delish. I like that you kept it simple so that its flavor complements the lamb. Definitely giving this a try.
Joanne
Saturday 10th of May 2014
Well your oven is obviously a total drama queen! I mean, it could have broken without all the fire. :P
I'm glad that lamb didn't go to waste!
Bonnie
Saturday 10th of May 2014
Have no grill. What would oven temp and time be?
nutmegnanny
Sunday 11th of May 2014
Hi Bonnie! I apologize for my delayed response. I have been away with limited internet. I think you would be fine roasting at 450 for about 30 minutes and then dropping the temperature to 300 and letting it roast until the internal temperature was 125/130 degrees. This will give you a pink center. Hope this helps! I have not personally tried it this way but this is what I would do if I were putting it in the oven. Enjoy!
Bonnie
Friday 9th of May 2014
This sounds wonderful. I don't have a grill so what oven temp and cooking time would you suggest?
Kim Beaulieu
Friday 9th of May 2014
I love my grills, everything gets grilled from May to October. The only way to keep the house cool in the summer where we live. I need to try this. Great way to improvise. It's cooked perfectly.