Just like a ham hone, smoked lamb bones are a great way to add rich flavor to a pan of beans or rich soup stock. If you make your own stock or bone broth at home, you have to try making your own smoked lamb or goat bones! Read on and I’ll explain how to do it.
Every year during butchery season I make a few batches of bacon cure to make lamb bacon and/or venison bacon. Inevitably I end up having some of the cure left over and try to find some creative uses for it. One day after harvesting and butchering lamb on the farm, I had lots of bones and bacon cure left over, so I started smoking them.
If you like the flavor of bacon (who doesn’t) you’ll love smoked lamb bones. But, if curing the bones sounds like too much work, you can always just season them with salt and pepper and your favorite herbs and smoke them without curing first.
The first few times I made these, I used my lamb bacon cure since I was trying to use it up. Know that using the bacon cure will add a bit of sweetness to the broth, which you may or may not want depending on how you’d like to use the finished broth. It’s just fine to season the bones with only salt and pepper and then smoke them too-be creative and see what you can come up with.
Your smoked bones are a sort of concentrate, a seasoning if you will, that you can add to anything that’s liquid or needs to simmer. Here’s a few ideas.
This recipe is by Chef Alan Bergo, the Forager Chef. A chef from Minnesota, Alan is a culinary industry veteran, former executive chef of acclaimed Lucia’s Restaurant, and the Salt Cellar. Author of The Forager Chef’s Book of Flora, he’s one of the most respected voices in the world of foraging and wild food. He’s best known as the founder of Forager Chef, his website focused on wild ingredients that reaches millions of readers each year. Learn more about Chef Alan and his hunt for mushrooms, wild and obscure foods at foragerchef.com.
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