I been cooking lamb for a good 25 years. I did not marinate this at all and it turned out perfectly tender. I always try to use a New Zealand leg in my curries. The key is to sear it it quickly in very hot olive oil and then cook on low heat and don't cook it too long. - oh...and I am not a Greek but I studied it - o filos estin allos autosNot much fat or connective tissue on this lamb, hope the marinade helped keep it moist and soft.
I love a lamb curry once in a while, but as a Greek anything other than coal-roasted lamb in Easter (next week for us) is sacrilege!
Probably very good, right? But the Greek obsession with "fresh" meat sounds like it's at play there too. Meat needs a minimum of a week hanging. My butcher in Athens, whom I trusted 100%, even refused - or recommended against - me buying a piece of meat as it was "too fresh". That's 100% respecting your client, he knows I like aged meat, and a piece slaughtered 2-3 days ago would taste too green for me, so he let it go to less discerning customersmy goat and lamb as well as beef are raised by a family in the village and if I look out of my house window I can see the stable where they are unofficially slaughtered.
this week there will be a constant stream of people collecting their Easter meat.
Cant get much more local than that
they do have walk in fridges and will keep meat for you,but yes a lot is sold very fresh.Probably very good, right? But the Greek obsession with "fresh" meat sounds like it's at play there too. Meat needs a minimum of a week hanging. My butcher in Athens, whom I trusted 100%, even refused - or recommended against - me buying a piece of meat as it was "too fresh". That's 100% respecting your client, he knows I like aged meat, and a piece slaughtered 2-3 days ago would taste too green for me, so he let it go to less discerning customers