This Irish-style stew with lamb, potatoes, and carrots is baked in the oven until the meat is tender and delicious!
Ingredients
- 1 pound cubed lamb meat
- 1 large onion , halved and sliced
- 1 pound baking potatoes , peeled and sliced
- 1 carrot , peeled and sliced
- 1 large stalk celery , sliced
- 2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
- salt and pepper to taste
- 2 cups beef stock
- 1 tablespoon chopped fresh parsley , for garnish
Instructions
-
1
Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F (165 degrees C).
-
2
Layer lamb, onion, potatoes, carrot, and celery in an oven-proof pot or casserole dish. Season each layer with parsley, salt, and pepper as you go. Pour in beef stock and cover tightly.
-
3
Bake in the preheated oven until lamb is very tender, about 1 ½ to 2 hours. Divide into bowls and garnish with additional parsley.
Nutrition Facts
Per serving
Want to cook this?
Open in the PantryLink app to scale servings, check your pantry stock, and generate a shopping list.
Sign In to Save Recipe Create Free AccountSuggest an Edit
Help improve this recipe's categorization, image, or dietary info. Earn points and badges!
Suggest Changes in AppPrefer a printed copy? Use our print-friendly view with adjustable servings and font size.
Open Print ViewMore Unknown Recipes
Muesli
This muesli recipe is a nutritious and delicious breakfast cereal. Use any dried fruit you desire. You can also use almonds in place of walnuts if you like. It's wonderful with hot or cold milk!
Bahamian Baked Grouper
This recipe is great for grouper fillets, but you can also use it with tilapia. It's both healthy and flavorful! You don't have to love fish to love this dish. Serve it with rice and cole slaw to complete the meal.
Crispy Rolled Breakfast Burrito
I've always loved the idea of a breakfast burrito, but I've never been crazy about the execution. It always seemed like we were rolling up a bunch of random breakfast ingredients in a tortilla. Plus, it always bothered me that just a little of the top and bottom got browned, I mean, what about the sides? Here I'm going to show you a technique that takes care of both of those issues and will work no matter what ingredients you decide to use.