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Lamb is often sorted into three kinds of meat: forequarter, loin, and hindquarter. The forequarter includes the neck, shoulder, front legs, and the ribs up to the shoulder blade. The hindquarter includes the rear legs and hip. The loin includes the ribs between the two. Lamb chops are cut from the rib, loin
Mutton flaps, or breast of lamb, are an inexpensive cut of meat from a sheep. Consisting of a sheep's lower rib meat, mutton flaps are considered a low-quality cut in Western countries, as opposed to pork and beef ribs. [1] They have been described there as a "tough, scraggy meat", if not properly prepared. [2]
Lamb and mutton are popular in autumn, often used in fårikål (mutton stew with cabbage). Pinnekjøtt—steamed cured and sometimes smoked mutton ribs, traditionally on a bed of birch sticks, hence the name, meaning "stick meat" —is traditionally served as Christmas dinner in the western parts of Norway. Other meat dishes include:
In a bowl, whisk the vadouvan, salt and sugar. Set the ribs on a rimmed baking sheet and rub the spice mixture all over them; refrigerate, covered, for 8 hours or overnight.
The restaurant dates back to 1918, when they began serving quality barbecue of mutton, chicken, pork ribs, and beef, continuing to this day to produce barbecue exclusively made with hickory and ...
Ribs of bison, goat, ostrich, crocodile, alligator, llama, alpaca, beefalo, African buffalo, water buffalo, kangaroo, and other animals are also consumed in various parts of the world. They can be roasted, grilled, fried, sous vide, baked, braised, or smoked. A set of ribs served together (5 or more), is known as a rack (as in a rack of ribs).
Bake the ribs, uncovered, until the sauce begins to form a crust-like appearance, about 1 hour. Remove the ribs from the oven and use the pastry brush to coat the ribs with the remaining 1/2 cup ...
In cuisine, cutlet (derived from French côtelette, côte, "rib" [1] [2]) refers to: a thin slice of meat from the leg or ribs of mutton, veal, [2] pork, or chicken; a dish made of such slice, often breaded (also known in various languages as a cotoletta, Kotelett, kotlet or kotleta) a croquette or cutlet-shaped patty made of ground meat