Lamb is traditional at Easter and this butterflied leg of lamb recipe is a little bit different. In Italian, tagliata means “cut”. Italians cleverly serve their meat thinly sliced and shared, turning a heavy meat dish into something much lighter that is as great to eat in the winter as it is in the summer, when the lamb could be done on the barbecue. Make sure to get lamb that is Bord Bia Quality Assured.
Rosemary and mint each go so well with lamb and they are both very easy to grow. There are several excellent Irish goat’s cheeses being produced now. I like St Tola from Clare and Ardsallagh Goat Farm in Carrigtwohill, Co Cork, makes cheese from its own herd and locally sourced milk.
This hot cross bun pudding continues the Easter theme. I recently visited the McCloskey bakery in Drogheda with the Simply Better team. I was absolutely blown away by its range of breads and cakes. It is great to see a family business that was set up in the 1940s thriving today.
Happy cooking,
Neven.
Lamb tagliata with Puy lentil and goat’s cheese salad
Serves eight
1 tbsp chopped fresh rosemary
1 tsp sea salt
1 tsp freshly ground black pepper
1.75kg (3lb 12oz) butterflied leg of lamb, well trimmed (ask the butcher to make sure no piece is thicker than 5cm/2in)
2 tbsp olive oil
Roughly chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley, to garnish
For the Puy lentil salad:
4 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
4 shallots, finely chopped
2 x 400g (14oz) cans Puy lentils, drained and rinsed
100g (4oz) sun-dried tomatoes (preserved in oil), drained and chopped
350g (12oz) goat’s cheese log, cut into bite-sized pieces
25g (1oz) fresh flat-leaf parsley leaves, roughly chopped
Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
Hot cross bun pudding
Serves six to eight
300ml cream
600ml milk
4 eggs
50g caster sugar
1 tsp vanilla essence
8 hot cross buns
40g soft butter
Finely grated zest of one lemon
3 tbsp chunky marmalade
Icing sugar, for dusting