I’m Told It’s Called Lamb Keema Curry

Ben Sears

Ben Sears is a writer and restaurant guy in Birmingham, Alabama. He lives quite happily across from a creek with his wife, two sons, and an obligatory dog. You can follow him on Twitter and read his blog, The Columbo Game.

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3 Responses

  1. J_A says:

    First of all, thank you for sharing your recipes. I, for one, appreciate them a lot.

    Having said that, there’s something that I find very wrong here. It is using ground lamb meat instead of bite-size chunks of lamb.

    By grounding meat you are increasing substantially the ratio of surface to volume of the “pieces: of meat. Put that loose ground meat in the fire and you end with overcooked, dry, meat, instead of the tender pieces of meat you get in a regular curry based dish. Overcooked meat loses flavor (and, pace Donald J Trump, it’s mot very nice to eat), so why use a fairly flavorful meat like lamb if you won’t be able to distinguish it from a lower grade quality of beef?

    At least a hamburger patty recreates the surface to volume ratio of a steak, but here what is essentially sauteed ground meat will get cooked and quite dry almost immediately, way before you add the sauces. It seems you are making a curry Bolognese sauce.

    Full disclosure, lamb is my favorite meat, and (very rare) lamb hamburger is my favorite burger.Report

    • Slade the Leveller in reply to J_A says:

      I love lamb in just about anything. I never had it growing up, but after discovering it in college because it was cheap, I have it quite often.

      I cringe when I see a recipe for shepherd’s pie calling for ground beef. Adding lamb to stir fry is amazingly good.Report

    • Ben Sears in reply to J_A says:

      Stew sized cubes would be great in this recipe. I don’t do much with ground lamb – burgers and meatball for the most part – and was looking for something new to do with it. The tomatoes and yogurt keep it from being dried out, so it worked, but larger cuts would too.
      I agree with you about lamb, except I like mine medium rare for loin chops and somewhere slightly north of med-rare but not quite to med with a rack. The fibers need a little longer. It’s a texture rather than taste thing. I can’t decide if my favorite is braised shank or a roasted leg.
      One benefit of ground lamb in this recipe that I wasn’t aware of when I wrote the post: Lamb curry leftover sloppy joes.Report