The lamb saratoga roast, also known as lamb forerib roast is one of my favorite cuts, as well as one of the most popular cuts ordered by chefs Shepherd Song supplies. It’s a little known cut, not often sold by other farmers, but it’s worth trying, especially if you like slow-cooked, tender meat.
The cut is located around the shoulder and neck, including the last bones of the loin, it’s similar to a pork shoulder. It must be slow-cooked, and is not a cut you’ll be serving medium rare.
LLamb saratoga rolls are one of the most elegant recipes this cut can become. They’ll take a bit of time with a paring knife to trim the meat off the bone, but the result is a juicy, tender roast that you can cook in a number of different ways. If deboning the lamb saratoga sounds like a lot of work, you can always just cook them in a crock pot too–they’ll work great for your favorite crock pot-pulled lamb recipes too, as will necks.
Serving a crowd? Use a lamb neck instead
Each saratoga will serve 2 people, or 4 small appetizer portions so they’re the perfect thing for a date night or special occasion, especially since they don’t need to be pampered—there’s no worry about overcooking. If you want to serve a similar dish like this to a crowd, you can order multiple saratoga roasts and de-bone them, or, you can also debone and filet a lamb or goat neck, which will give a little more meat and save on some prep time. Using one of our rolled breasts as we show in this video, is also a good alternative.
The stuffing
With the stuffing, less is more. A sprinkle of breadcrumbs, a scattering of toasted nuts and a small handful of chopped parsley is all you need, too many ingredients can make it difficult to make the rolls and get clean, attractive slices as pictured. Chef stuffed the roast pictured with black walnuts—a special treat, but any nut, or no nuts, are fine.
You’ll need a sharp paring knife and some patience, but the meat that’s on this cut is some of the best on the whole animal for slow cooking. If deboning and rolling sounds like a lot of work, you can also just season the saratoga cut, brown it and cook like a pot roast with the bone in. The images below illustrate how to debone and stuff the roll.
This recipe is by James Beard Award-winning Chef Alan Bergo. He’s a chef from Minnesota and author of The Forager Chef’s Book of Flora. Learn more about Chef Alan at foragerchef.com.
Looking for grass-fed lamb and goat online? Shepherd Song Farm: Grass to table. We raise lambs & goats traditionally, humanely and sustainably. 100% Grass Fed, Pasture Raised, Never Confined, no Hormones, Grains or Animal Byproducts. Born, raised and processed in the U.S.A. Good for you and good for the environment.
Lamb or goat breast and lamb neck are very similar in the ways they can be rolled and stuffed like this. If you want more examples of how you can use those cuts, and the saratoga, take a look at the following:
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