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Home Collections Winter Warmers

Ultimate Roast Lamb: 12-hour lamb shoulder

By Nagi Maehashi
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Published8 Oct '21 Updated18 Jun '25
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A lamb leg is classic. A 3-hour shoulder is excellent. But for the most succulent roast lamb of your life, slow-roast it for 12 hours in the oven overnight. Cooked at a very low temperature with plenty of braising liquid, you can set-and-forget without a worry. This entirely hands-off, easy cooking method yields superior results with the bonus that it reheats 100% perfectly and you can cook up to 4 shoulders at once.

This is a reader-favourite recipe included by popular demand in my debut cookbook “Dinner”!

Showing how tender the flesh is of the 12 Hour Slow Roasted Lamb Shoulder

What’s so amazing about a 12 hour lamb, anyway?

There are many devoted fans of this super 3-Hour Slow Roasted Lamb Shoulder, stuffed with garlic and rosemary. And there will always be a place in my life for a 3-hour lamb, something speedy you can pop in the oven on a lazy Sunday afternoon for supper that night.

So why should you give the 12-hour lamb a go? Because it’s even better. 🤷🏻‍♀️ See, it’s a bit like flying. Think of 3-hour lamb like business class. It’s pretty awesome and nobody on the receiving end is going to complain. But 12-hour lamb is the next rung, the top shelf – it’s first class. And once you’ve flown first class, it’s hard to look at anything else the same way again!

Here’s what makes 12-hour lamb that much more special:

  • Lower temp = more succulent meat – Tough cuts like lamb shoulder need slow-cooking to tenderise them. The lower the roasting temperature, the less total moisture evaporation and thus juicier meat. 3-hour lamb is cooked at 180°C/350°F, while the 12 hour lamb is cooked at only 100°C/212°F.

  • Better flavour – Not only is the flesh juicier but the slow braising-roasting method here means you get the best of both worlds: flavour infused into the flesh from the surface rub and lamb juices which mingles with the braising liquid, and surface browning you can only get with roasting.

  • Hands-off overnight cooking – Covered, with plenty of braising liquid to keep it moist, our first class lamb cooks overnight on autopilot. No basting, no removing covering to brown, no tray rotations – it completely takes care of itself. Wake up the next day and be greeted with roasted meat perfection!

  • Easy to scale up – Make 2 at the same time in one pan, or 4 across 2 pans!

  • Reheats 100% perfectly – Unlike many other roasts, this 12-hour slow-roasted lamb shoulder reheats 100% perfectly, which makes it an excellent make-ahead centrepiece for large gatherings.

  • It creates its own jus (fancy word but it’s dead easy) – It’s just the braising liquid, simmered to concentrate and thickened slightly with cornflour/cornstarch. After 12-hours with the lamb, this is flavour-packed liquid gold!

  • A ludicrous effort-to-reward ratio – I am a VERY big fan of recipes where you reap high rewards for a small outlay of effort!

Making 12 Hour Slow Roasted Lamb Shoulder

What you need to make 12-hour slow-roasted lamb shoulder

I’ve gone for classic flavours here that lamb loves – rosemary and garlic. Simple is all we need when we’re doing slow-roasting! (Note: Dried oregano missing from photo, oops!)

Ingredients for 12 Hour Slow Roasted Lamb Shoulder
  • Lamb shoulder – The more economical yet superior brother to lamb leg (in my humble opinion). It’s richer, it’s got more flavour, it’s juicer, and it’s far more forgiving to cook than lamb leg. Leg either needs to be roasted to blushing pink perfection or slow-roasted to fall-apart tenderness (but because it’s leaner there’s less margin for error with the cook time).

    Shoulders are widely available these days in Australia, even at large grocery stores (Coles, Woolies etc). They are typically around 1.3 – 1.6kg (young lambs with more tender flesh) but sometimes you will find them as large as 2kg+ which are still terrific, but the flesh is a wee bit less tender (because they are older animals).

  • Garlic, oregano (missing from photo, oops!) and rosemary – Timeless companions to lamb!

  • Onion – To keep the lamb slightly elevated off the base (instead of using a rack) and also to flavour the sauce (lamb jus) which we make using the braising liquid.

  • Olive oil – For rubbing the lamb so the salt, pepper, garlic and rosemary stick.

  • Water – Plenty here, and there’s a few reasons for this. Firstly, for moisture retention in the flesh during the slow-roasting period. Secondly, it promotes more even cooking of the flesh because partially braising in a liquid distributes heat more effectively than the convective heat of oven air (ie. just dry roasting). Thirdly, to prevent the pan drying out which would result in the pan base residues burning. And lastly, the water becomes heavily flavoured with lamb juices, which we then reduce to make the sauce. There’s absolutely no need to use stock!


How to make 12-hour lamb shoulder

Hint: There’s a lot of sleeping on the job involved. We need more recipes like this!! 😂

How to make 12 Hour Slow Roasted Lamb Shoulder
  1. Marinade / rub – Mix the rosemary, garlic, salt and pepper with the olive oil.

  2. Slather then optional marinade – Slather the rub all over the lamb shoulder, being sure to get right into all those cracks and crevices! I just do this straight in the roasting pan – why bother dirtying a cutting board??

    Then if time permits, leave the lamb to marinate for 2 hours on the counter in the roasting pan, or up to 24 hours in the fridge.

    Marinating is an optional step. Why? Because the long and slow cook time means the lamb is essentially marinating as it cooks, in my opinion. But I’m sure people with a more refined palate than me can probably taste the difference between marinating, and not. I can’t. So I usually skip the marinating time.

  3. Water – Pop the onion wedges under the lamb (I promise they are hidden under the lamb shown above!) then pour the water into the pan.

  4. Brown 45 minutes – Pop the lamb in the oven for 45 minutes, uncovered. This is to give the browning a head start. It will brown further when covered in foil, but this just ensures our finished produce is really nicely browned. It’s easier and better to do this first than at the end when it’s already cooked.

  5. 12 hours in oven – Cover lamb with baking paper then two layers of foil, sealed tightly (or better yet, a heavy roasting pan lid) to prevent evaporating moisture leakage. We want all of it to stay locked in! Then place in the oven for 12 hours at 100°C/212°F. Now go to bed and sleep well, relaxed by the knowledge that your lamb will turn out beautifully tomorrow.

  6. Fall-apart meat and LOTS of liquid! When the lamb emerges from the oven in the morning, the flesh should pry apart with very little effort (check the side, not top, to preserve presentation). The pan will have even MORE liquid than it started with because of all the lamb juices. See? No risk of a dry pan burning!

Close up showing tender fall apart meat of 12 Hour Slow Roasted Lamb Shoulder

For serving / holding / reheating advice and guidelines on how I would time things to make it effortless for serving at gatherings, see the section just before the recipe video. For now, let me show you how to make the sauce – Lamb Jus!


Lamb Jus: Fancy-sounding but super-easy gravy

Jus gravy for 12 Hour Slow Roasted Lamb Shoulder on a platter with lemon roasted ptoatoes
Lamb jus – the sauce for 12 hour lamb roast

The sauce for this slow-roast lamb is an intensely-flavoured wonder, packed with the tasty and meaty goodness you can only get from 12 hours of slow cooking! Technically this is a kind of jus as opposed to a gravy, because it’s made from a reduction of meat juices rather than pan scrapings.

The nice thing about it is that it’s much less fussy to make than gravy. No wrangling a roasting pan on the stove to make a roux with the fat in the pan here. Instead, we simply simmer the pan juices to concentrate, then thicken slightly with cornflour / cornstarch so it coats the meat nicely when doused.

How to make Lamb Jus

How to make 12 Hour Slow Roasted Lamb Shoulder
  1. Reduce pan juices – Remove the lamb to a platter, another roasting pan or a large container. Then strain all the pan juices into a saucepan. Simmer rapidly to reduce to 1 cup.

  2. Thicken with cornflour – Make a cornflour slurry by mixing 1 teaspoon of cornflour with 1/4 cup of water. Pour that straight into the saucepan while stirring. At first it will make the liquid murky, but as it comes up to the boil it will become shiny and clear, and will thicken slightly.

    We do not want the jus to be too thick – not like our usual gravy that we serve with roasts. A jus is supposed to be thinner. This is because it looks and pours more elegantly than a more viscous gravy. Also because it typically has more intense savoury flavour than gravy, you use less. So we want the sauce to run more readily so it coats the meat more thinly than gravy (in, say, the 3-hour lamb shoulder).

    Once the jus is ready, pour into a jug and serve alongside the lamb. It can be made days in advance, stored in a container and reheated simply in the microwave or on the stove.

Lamb Jus - best sauce for Slow Roasted Lamb, super quick and easy!
Lamb jus – the sauce for 12 hour lamb roast
Fork picking up 12 Hour Slow Roasted Lamb Shoulder with gravy
That pile of tender meat…

A go-to main for gatherings

As I mentioned right at the beginning, some of the reasons this has become my go-to centrepiece for a a group menu is because:

  • It’s easy to scale up (up to 4 shoulders in one oven)

  • It’s pretty much entirely hands-off

  • It can be made ahead the night before, and reheats 100% perfectly

So I thought it might be helpful to also share with you my typical roast-cooking game plans including timings, which I follow depending on when and how I plan to serve the roast.

Serving your roast: Planning & timings

  • If serving at a lunch … Roast the shoulder(s) overnight. I usually put it in at 8pm for browning, 9 pm for the 12 hour slow roast, then pull it out at 9am in the morning. The lamb has so much heat in it, it’s fine to stay out on the counter until lunch is served at 1pm or so. If it needs a touch of reheating, just give it a quick blast in the microwave (yep, seriously…) or cover with foil and pop it in a 150°C/300°F oven.

    This also leaves room for further oven time if needed, if the lamb flesh was not quite fall-apart.

  • If serving at a dinner … Roast lamb shoulder(s) overnight. Time it to suit your sleep schedule!

    After it comes out of the oven the next day, fully cool to room temperature. Make the jus. Then cover and refrigerate all. Take lamb out of fridge 3 hours prior to serving (yes, it takes hours to come to room temperature, so that reheating is easier and more even). Reheat 1 hour, covered, in oven.

  • For early birds! … Rise early and get the lamb in the oven by 6 am (!!) so it’s out of the oven by 7 pm ready for dinner. (45 minutes roasting uncovered + 12 hour slow roast time). Warning: For the sure hand only! This is a tight schedule. I really do find it’s just easier to cook the night before!!!

  • How to keep it warm during service … If you are planning to serve the lamb buffet-style where people take time to serve themselves, it’s best to serve the lamb inside a slow cooker on warm mode. I place a whole lamb shoulder in there, putting out one at a time (the others stays warm, covered in the oven) and people use tongs to pull the meat off. Easy, no carving, and help-yourself serving!

Here’s a couple of gatherings from this year that starred this 12 hour slow roasted lamb! Firstly, my belated New Years’ Eve 2021 party that took place in March:

Bring the Bling NYE 2022 Party in March 2021
Buffet with 12 hour slow roasted lamb as the main protein
Bring the Bling NYE 2022 Party in March 2021
The theme was “Bring the Bling”! Hence the hot pink dress and bling earrings!
Bring the Bling NYE 2022 Party in March 2021
Dozer! Don’t lift your head 😂
Bring the Bling NYE 2022 Party in March 2021
Lamb kept warm in a slow cooker
Bring the Bling NYE 2022 Party in March 2021

And more recently on a trip to Tasmania when I took over the kitchen of Meadowbank Vineyard to put on a big lunch for Tassie friends! Four lamb shoulders were slow-cooked overnight in one oven in the Air BNB I was staying at, then were transported to the vineyard in the morning for the lunch. More on this trip in the Postcards from Tasmania section in this newsletter from when I took the trip.

Meadowbank Vineyard Tasmania Lunch
Meadowbank Vineyard Tasmania Lunch
Not a SINGLE photo with the lamb shoulder! 😂
Meadowbank Vineyard Tasmania Lunch

12 Hour Slow Roasted Lamb Shoulder

What to serve with 12 hour roast lamb

A grand main deserves worthy sides!!

It’s pictured above with Greek Lemon Potatoes, which are a perfect match for this Mediterranean-style lamb. Also peeking out of the bottom corner is a big, juicy Greek Salad which is a lovely fresh side to cut through the richness of the lamb.

A big pan of Herb & Garlic Roasted Vegetables would also be ideal and can be made after the lamb comes out of the oven since the lamb will stay warm for hours upon hours.

For a luxe option, add a side of Duck Fat Potatoes, the crunchiest roast potatoes you will ever have in your life. And for greens, a big bowl of the Garlic Sautéed Green Beans from Wednesday would be ideal!

So! What do you think? Have I convinced you to give this a go? I don’t crown this the ULTIMATE Roast Lamb lightly! I truly do believe this to be the best way to roast a lamb, for the most superior results. And I’ve shared a fair few of roast lamb recipes in my time, just look below!

More of my Roast lamb recipes

Roast lamb leg with roast potatoes
Roast Lamb Leg with Gravy
Slow Cooked Lamb Shoulder in a baking pan, fresh out of the one
Slow Cooked Lamb Shoulder
Greek Butterflied Lamb Leg on a platter, ready to be shared
Greek Butterflied Lamb Leg
Slow Roasted GREEK Leg of Lamb - Tender fall apart lamb made the Greek way! Super easy.
Greek Slow Roasted Leg of Lamb
The most succulent and easiest lamb leg ever, this Slow Cooker Roast Lamb Leg takes minutes to prepare. The gravy is incredible! www.recipetineats.com
Slow Cooker Roast Lamb Leg
Slow Cooked Lamb Shawarma is meltingly tender and has the most heavenly fragrance. Quick to prepare, sensational for gatherings! recipetineats.com
Slow Cooked Lamb Shawarma

– Nagi x


Watch how to make it

This recipe features in my debut cookbook Dinner. The book is mostly new recipes, but this is a reader favourite included by popular demand!

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Ultimate slow-roasted lamb: 12-hour Lamb Shoulder

Author: Nagi
Prep: 10 minutes mins
Cook: 13 hours hrs
Marinating, optional: 2 hours hrs
Mains, Roasts
Australian, Western
4.94 from 137 votes
Servings5
Tap or hover to scale
Print
Recipe video above. A 3-hour lamb shoulder is great. A 12-hour lamb shoulder is better! The meat is even more succulent because a lower cooking temperature means less moisture loss, and better flavour infusion from the rub.
The sauce is a Lamb Jus made using the braising juices so it has phenomenal flavour. Don't be intimidated, it's simple and no more difficult to make than gravy!
This is an excellent make-ahead recipe for gatherings. Why? Because you can make up to 4 shoulders in one standard oven. And the room for error is also almost nil; it's almost entirely hands-off cooking that magically takes care of itself overnight. Most importantly, the meat is so juicy it reheats 100% perfectly. I cook it overnight and reheat to serve that evening.
About scaling up: 2 shoulders can be cooked in one large pan with no change to cook time. 4 shoulders (2 lambs in 2 pans, on 2 shelves) takes about 14 to 15 hours.

Ingredients

  • 1.6 – 2.2kg / 3.2 – 4.4lb lamb shoulder , bone-in (Note 1)
  • 2 cups water (Note 2)
  • 1 brown onion (unpeeled), cut into 6 wedges (Note 3)

Marinade

  • 2 1/2 tsp fresh rosemary , chopped (finely)
  • 1 tbsp dried oregano
  • 2 garlic cloves (big!) , finely chopped
  • 1 tsp salt , kosher or cooking salt (or 3/4 tsp table salt)
  • 1/2 tsp black pepper
  • 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil

Jus, for serving

  • 1 tsp cornflour / cornstarch
  • 1/4 cup water
  • 1/4 tsp salt
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 230°C / 450°F (210°C fan).
  • Marinade/rub: Mix the Marinade ingredients in a small bowl. Rub all over the lamb surface, getting it right into all the cracks and crevices!
  • Marinate 2 – 24 hrs: If time permits, marinate for 2 hours on the counter in a roasting pan, or up to 24 hours in the fridge. I skip this step more often than not, however. (Note 4)
  • Prepare roasting pan: Scatter onion in the base of the roasting pan. Place lamb shoulder on top . Pour water into pan.
  • Roast uncovered for 45 minutes.
  • Slow-roast 12 hours: Turn oven down to 100°C/210°F (both fan and standard, Note 5). Cover lamb with baking paper, then a double layer of foil and seal very tightly to avoid water evaporation. Roast for 12 hours (I always do overnight!).
  • Check meat – Test side of lamb with two forks. The meat should be fall-apart tender. If not, cover and return to oven.
  • Remove lamb: There will (should!) be a lot of liquid pooled under the lamb in the roasting pan. Remove lamb to a large dish. Cover loosely with foil to keep warm. It will stay warm for 2 to 3 hours. See Note for reheating / making ahead.

Lamb Jus:

  • Reduce liquid: Strain all the liquid in the roasting pan into a saucepan (Note 2). Bring to a boil then simmer rapidly on medium-high until it reduces down to 1 cup (250ml).
  • Thicken: Mix cornflour with water. Pour into jus in a thin stream while stirring continuously. Continue to cook for a minute or two over medium heat, stirring every now and then, until it thickens to a syrup consistency. Add salt and pepper to taste.

Serve:

  • Serve Slow Roasted Lamb with Jus. Use tongs for tearing meat off – no knife for carving needed! Pictured in post with Greek Lemon Roasted Potatoes, a perfect match for this Greek-ish flavoured lamb. Roasted Vegetables would also be ideal.

Recipe Notes:

Serving portions – Allow 300g/10oz of lamb per person for normal people, or 500g/1lb for big eaters. This measure is the bone-in, raw lamb. Meat shrinks considerably once cooked, you probably lose around 30% in weight so ends up being much less as cooked meat.

1. Lamb shoulder – A tough cut of meat that needs to be cooked far beyond well done until the meat becomes fall-apart tender. You do not need a knife to carve this meat, pull it off with tongs!
Shoulder comes in all sorts of sizes depending on the size/age of lamb! The cook time doesn’t really differ because the meat itself needs a minimum amount of time to break down and become tender, and also the low temperature means it’s very forgiving, ie. it’s hard to overcook this meat to the point it dries out.
If your shoulder is really small though, say 1.2kg / 2.4lb, then you can probably cut down the cook time by 2 hours, but it should still be succulent even if you stick with the full 12 hours.
Lamb leg – This recipe is not suitable for leg, please use this Slow Roasted Lamb Leg recipe instead.
2. Water is all we need for the braising liquid because it gets so much flavour from the lamb juices, no need to use stock.
Liquid in pan after slow roasting – If the foil was tightly sealed (and your lamb is juicy!), you will/should end up with 3 – 4 cups liquid at the end. If you have less than 1 cup, add water to top up before simmer on stove to make the Jus.
3. Onion – Elevates the lamb slightly off base for more even cooking, plus adds flavour to the liquid that forms the Jus (sauce). Can keep skin on because it holds together better and we strain it out anyway.
4. Marinating – The long and slow cook time means the lamb is essentially marinating as it cooks, in my opinion. But I’m sure people with a more refined palate than me can probably taste the difference between marinating, and not. (I can’t).
5. Oven temp – I find that you need to use the same temperature for standard vs fan oven for low temperature, slow cooking. It’s something I’ve discovered over the years across various recipes, including things slow cooked at slightly higher temperatures like Massaman Lamb Shanks. I think it’s because the lower the oven temperature, the smaller the difference in actual oven heat between fan vs standard ovens.
6. Workflow / timing / reheating: Here’s what I do –
  • Serving for lunch – Slow roast overnight so it comes out of there oven around 9 am (to give a bit of headroom for extra oven time if needed, in case meat is not fall-apart-tender). Lamb will stay warm covered in foil for 3 hours easily, in a new pan or container (don’t leave in liquid, as it will continue cooking). If needed, reheat per below.
  • Dinner – Slow roast overnight, allow lamb to cool to room temperature, then store in fridge. Take out 3 hours prior to serving (to de-chill for more even, faster reheating). Reheat covered in oven at 150°C/300°F for 1 hour (for 1 lamb shoulder; 4 will take longer). Emergency reheating option: Microwave it. Yes, really!
  • Jus – Make, cool to room temperature, then refrigerate until required. Reheat in microwave or saucepan on stove.
Storage – Cooked lamb will keep in the fridge for 4 to 5 days, or freezer for 3 months. It is at its best within 24 hours of cooking I find, but it’s still 97% excellent on days 2 to 5.

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 377cal (19%)Carbohydrates: 4g (1%)Protein: 41g (82%)Fat: 21g (32%)Saturated Fat: 5g (31%)Polyunsaturated Fat: 2gMonounsaturated Fat: 12gCholesterol: 129mg (43%)Sodium: 727mg (32%)Potassium: 633mg (18%)Fiber: 1g (4%)Sugar: 1g (1%)Vitamin A: 20IUVitamin C: 2mg (2%)Calcium: 53mg (5%)Iron: 4mg (22%)
Keywords: lamb roast, lamb shoulder, slow roast lamb
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

Life of Dozer

Dozer on the job: taste-testing a prospective recipe for the cookbook!

He approved. (He is very consistent with his rating, I find.)

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495 Comments

  1. Carol says

    February 13, 2022 at 5:00 pm

    Hi Nagi , was wondering if you & Dozer are alright ? As I haven’t received any recipes from you for awhile . Hope you are both ok . Take care 💕

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      February 14, 2022 at 12:38 pm

      Hi Carol – we are both fine and working hard on my cookbook…I am hoping to be doing a few small posts soon!! https://salesdock.info/making-of-a-cookbook-part-2-the-cookbook-vortex/%3C/a%3E N x

      Reply
  2. Phil says

    January 30, 2022 at 9:03 pm

    5 stars
    Amazing! I did this today (up early after a late night!) and it worked a treat. So tasty and juicy and tender. I had a boneless shoulder, but it was still brilliant. Thanks for this recipe!

    Reply
  3. Phil says

    January 29, 2022 at 10:43 am

    If I have a lamb shoulder without the bone, any changes to the recipe? About 1.4kg without the bone.

    Reply
    • Rachel says

      April 15, 2022 at 10:39 pm

      Did you try this, Phil? I bought two boneless shoulders I want to use for Easter lunch, but now I want to use this recipe!

      Reply
      • Phil says

        April 17, 2022 at 10:59 am

        Rachel, it worked perfectly – no changes needed!

        Reply
        • Rachel Lam says

          April 17, 2022 at 9:57 pm

          Thank you! I did it today and just cooked it for 10 hours- also good!

          Reply
  4. Su says

    January 29, 2022 at 8:10 am

    5 stars
    Just WOW!! I made this today and it was sublime. I’ve never in my life cooked or eaten such beautiful, tender lamb. So easy to make too.

    The jus was also delicious, although I did add a lot more cornflour than the recipe said because I like my gravy nice and thick!

    Because we’re Brits we enjoyed it with Yorkshire puddings and roast potatoes – nothing beats it!! 😍

    Reply
  5. Louise says

    January 24, 2022 at 10:34 am

    Well, I could cry. The lamb smells amazing & falls off the bone but the jus? I have a pan full of fat and ringed with black, burnt ‘toffee’. It WOULD have been delicious. So disappointed and don’t know where I went wrong. One of my rare failures of your usually foolproof recipes, even with your guidance.

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      January 25, 2022 at 5:36 am

      Louise, I’m so sorry to hear that. The reason for that would have been that the foil was not put on tightly enough so liquid escaped. Or that you accidentally forgot to cover it? As you can see from the video, there is an extraordinary amount of liquid at the end of the cooking time!!! N xx

      Reply
      • Louise says

        January 25, 2022 at 8:00 am

        Thanks Nagi, it was still delicious. I will try again . Not deterred.,

        Reply
  6. Nellie says

    January 19, 2022 at 7:51 pm

    5 stars
    Amazing flavour and so easy. I cooked 2 shoulders for a family dinner. Reheating was easy. We have a Greek background so know what Greek lamb should taste like. I can tell you that everyone absolutely loved it. Even my 2 year old grandson said it was delicious. We always use lemon when cooking lamb so I just added lemon juice to the jus. This recipe is a keeper.

    Reply
  7. Louisa Pollino says

    January 11, 2022 at 7:33 pm

    I cooked this yesterday and had for dinner tonight – absolutely amazing!!! So easy to prepare, cook and reheat.
    Thank you so much for another stellar recipe 🙂

    Reply
  8. Nat says

    January 8, 2022 at 7:56 pm

    Hi Nagi, this lamb looks amazing! I have a dutch oven that I have been wanting to try a slow cooked lamb shoulder in. Would I still need to use the baking paper and foil or would just the lid be fine?

    Reply
  9. Ravi says

    January 7, 2022 at 7:21 pm

    5 stars
    Made this today. Didn’t have lamb shoulder so used 4 lamb shanks I had defrosted.. Modified the cook times 30 mins on high about 6 hours low temp.worked a treat. So tender and a great change from wine based sauces. Really enjoyed this. Messed up the gravy though I think I got a bit impatient but didn’t need it anyway.😁

    Reply
  10. JJ says

    January 5, 2022 at 10:51 pm

    Really easy to make – the meat just fell of the bone- Thanks Nagi – I’ve just discovered your website and am already a fan.

    Reply
  11. Rakel says

    January 4, 2022 at 2:48 am

    5 stars
    Cooked this over night, got it out of the oven at 8:30am yesterday, and reheated it for an hour when we were ready to eat that evening, absolutely gorgeous. Happy new year to you and Dozer and your family, can´t wait for your cook book to be finished, must so exciting for you to be doing this, all the best, Rakel & co x

    Reply
  12. Anne says

    January 2, 2022 at 2:18 am

    5 stars
    I made this for Christmas and it was WONDERFUL; cooked to perfection, It was so good that it will replace my normal Sunday roast lamb recipe, and it was so easy. The only modification was to allow the cooking juices to settle out and remove all the excess fat and oil before making the jus.

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      January 5, 2022 at 1:49 pm

      It is a classic and so easy! N x

      Reply
  13. Rakel says

    December 31, 2021 at 9:30 pm

    Hi Nagi, would this work in a roasting tin with a lid instead of the tin foil? I want to make this tomorrow or the day after to prove to my mum that it will work 🙂 thank you xx

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      January 6, 2022 at 4:52 pm

      HI Rakel – As long as you are able to completely seal the edges, the recipe will work. If I use a roasting pan with a lid, I still use the baking paper and seal the top with foil. N x

      Reply
  14. Beck Mjaskalo says

    December 31, 2021 at 9:32 am

    My two shoulders only have about 2 and a half hours to go. The kitchen smells great. Will be interested to see what’s under the foil. I might check it out after the 1.5hr mark as both shoulders were 1.3kg so a little on the small side.

    Thanks Nagi for your awesome recipes and detailed instructions.

    Happy New Year!!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      January 6, 2022 at 5:24 pm

      Happy New Year Beck! N x

      Reply
  15. Martin Borg says

    December 30, 2021 at 7:19 am

    First of all, thank you for this wonderful site – my goto recipe site whenever I want to impress 😉

    I am thinking of doing this for New Year’s Eve as my family is in quarantine (yaaayyy!) and so going ut is not an option, alas… I do have a boneless shoulder in the freezer, 1.2 – 1.3 kg (not rolled, presumably, as it looks like an uneven chunk of meat). I have scoured all the comments, old and new, but have not found directions for a boneless shoulder of this sort, and I’ll admit I am not very adventurous… If there’s no reply I’ll go with your advice above where you said “you can probably cut down the cook time by 2 hours”… And I wish you and Dozer a very happy New Year with lots of scrumptious food.

    Reply
    • Kathleen Jones says

      December 31, 2021 at 2:37 pm

      Wondering the same thing…

      Reply
  16. Chelsea says

    December 28, 2021 at 3:54 am

    5 stars
    Yum yum yum. I added Mexican spice, orange juice, and beer to my marinade. Cooking method was perfect and so simple – lamb turned out perfectly!

    Reply
  17. Liza says

    December 27, 2021 at 2:59 pm

    I made this for our family Xmas dinner. Soooo good, yummy, with minimal effort, essentially set & forget in the oven for 12 hours. Thank you Nagi 😊

    Reply
  18. David Bogie says

    December 27, 2021 at 10:54 am

    Nagi, I served this 12-hour lamb, your Greek Lemon Potatoes, pan-roasted asparagus, and salad on xmas. Flawlessly executed. The lamb shoulder was from a one-woman ranch near Ketchum, Idaho. Inspired by your excellent notation, I drew up a step-by-step schedule that began at 1000pm xmas eve and culminated with the buffet presentation at 300pm xmas day. Everything was perfect. Not just great — perfect. My gratitude for both your writing skills and thorough testing.

    Reply
  19. Eric says

    December 27, 2021 at 7:36 am

    I used your 12 recipe for Christmas lunch. Everyone loved it. Thank you!

    Reply
  20. Bronwyn says

    December 26, 2021 at 10:45 am

    5 stars
    This was delicious! I’ve found my new go-to for dinner parties. I couldn’t get the jus to work, it was like flavoured oil rather than a jus (my amateur status is to blame, not the recipe). Any tips for next time?

    Reply
    • Kate says

      January 16, 2022 at 6:58 pm

      Hi Bronwyn. To avoid a fatty, oily jus I strain the cooking juices into a jug, pop it into the fridge for a short time so the fat sets on top, then scoop off the fat and reduce the liquid that’s left in the jug. Sometimes I add a tablespoon or two of the fat back into the jus as I’m reducing it for a flavour burst, just depends on how it’s tasting! Hope this helps 🙂

      Reply
      • Bronwyn says

        January 17, 2022 at 1:54 pm

        Great idea! Thanks for the suggestion, I will definitely try that.

        Reply
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I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative! Read More

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