Lamb shoulder square cut whole is a square-shaped cut containing arm, blade, and rib bones. The thin, paperlike outside covering is called fell. This cut is usually prepared by roasting.
Lamb Shoulder Blade Chops
Lamb shoulder blade chops are cut from the blade portion of shoulder and contain part of the blade bone and backbone. They are usually prepared by braising, broiling, grilling, panbroiling, or panfrying.
Lamb Shoulder Arm Chops
Lamb shoulder arm chops are cut from the arm portion of shoulder and contain cross-sections of round arm bone and rib bones. They are usually prepared by braising, broiling, grilling, or panbroiling.
Lamb Shoulder Neck Slices
Lamb shoulder neck slices are cross-cuts of the neck portion containing small round bone. Lean meat is interspersed with connective tissue. Neck slices are usually prepared by braising.
Lamb Breast
Lamb breast is part of the forequarter and contains ribs. It is oblong-shaped with layers of fat and lean, with fat usually covering one of the sides. Lamb breast is usually prepared by braising or roasting.
Lamb Breast Riblets
Lamb breast riblets are cut from the breast and contain ribs with meat and fat in layers. The cuts are long and narrow and are usually prepared by braising or by cooking in liquid.
Lamb Shank
Lamb shank is cut from the arm of shoulder, contains leg bone and part of round shoulder bone, and is covered by a thin layer of fat and fell (a thin, paperlike covering). Lamb shank is usually prepared by braising or by cooking in liquid.
Lamb Rib Roast
Lamb rib roast contains rib bones, backbone, and thick, meaty rib eye muscle. The fell (a thin, paperlike covering) is usually removed. Lamb rib roast is usually prepared by roasting.
Lamb Rib Chops
Lamb rib chops contain backbone and, depending on the thickness, a rib bone. The chops have a meaty area consisting of rib eye muscle. The outer surface is covered by fat but with the fell (a thin, paperlike covering) removed. Lamb rib chops are usually prepared by broiling, grilling, panbroiling, panfrying, roasting, or baking.
Lamb Rib Crown Roast
Lamb rib crown roast is cut from half of the rib. The rib bone is trimmed one to two inches from the end. The ribs are curved and secured to resemble a crown when the roast rests on the backbone. This cut of meat of usually prepared by roasting.
Lamb Loin Chops
Lamb loin chops contain part of the backbone. Muscles include the eye of the loin (separated from the tenderloin by T-shaped finger bones) and the flank. Kidney fat is on the top of the tenderloin, and the outer surface is covered with fat, but with the fell (a thin, paperlike covering) removed. Lamb loin chops are usually prepared by broiling, grilling, panbroiling, or panfrying.
Lamb Loin Double Chops
Lamb loin double chops contain top loin (larger muscle) and tenderloin (smaller muscle), but with the flank removed from the cut. They are called double chops since this is a cross-cut of loin containing both sides of the carcass. Double chops are usually prepared by broiling, grilling, panbroiling, or panfrying.
Lamb Loin Double Chops Boneless
Lamb loin double chops boneless are the same as lamb loin double chops but with the bone removed from the loin, which is cut and rolled, pinwheel fashion, and secured to make compact boneless chops. The muscles include top loin (larger muscle) and tenderloin (smaller muscle). Lamb loin double chops boneless are usually prepared by broiling, grilling, panbroiling, or panfrying.
Lamb Leg Sirloin Chops
Lamb leg sirloin chops are cut from the sirloin section of the leg and contain backbone and part of the hip bone, which vary in shape. Muscles include the top sirloin, tenderloin, and flank. There is fat on the outside, but the fell (a thin, paperlike covering) is removed. Sirloin chops are usually prepared by broiling, grilling, panbroiling, or panfrying.
Lamb Leg Whole
Lamb leg whole contains the sirloin section with hip bone and the shank portion with round bone. The outside is covered with fell (a thin, paperlike covering). It is usually prepared by roasting.
Lamb Leg Shank Half
Lamb leg shank half contains the lower half of leg with the round leg included but with the sirloin half removed. It is heavily muscled and covered with fat and fell (a thin, paperlike covering). It is usually prepared by roasting.
Lamb Leg Frenched-Style Roast
Lamb leg Frenched-style roast is the whole leg with the sirloin section removed. It has a small amount of meat trimmed to expose an inch or more of shank bone. It is usually prepared by roasting.
Lamb Leg American-Style Roast
Lamb leg American-style roast is the whole leg with the sirloin section removed. It contains the same muscles and bones as lamb leg French-style roast, but with the shank removed, the meat folded back into a pocket on the inside of the leg, and fastened with skewers. It is usually prepared by roasting.
Lamb For Stew
Lamb for stew consists of meaty pieces of lamb with a small amount of fat, cut into one- to two-inch squares. It is usually prepared by braising or by cooking in liquid.
Ground Lamb
Ground lamb contains lean meat and trimmings from the leg, loin, rib, shoulder, flank, neck, breast, or shank. It is mechanically ground and sold in bulk or in patty form. Ground lamb is usually prepared by braising, broiling, grilling, panbroiling, panfrying, roasting, or baking.
LOL Guess you went to bed a happy man then !! Well I think we need to talk about it a little, we talk so much about beef, and their is other things we cut LOL
I know in my days in Atlanta, Ga. we cut about 8 to 10 a week back then. I know it seems to have become a item only cut in the bigger markets now or in certain areas of the USA, how about in your country, is it still something people eat a lot of or like there, or only in the bigger towns or certain areas.
I have 8 feet of lamb in the store at all times. Shoulder Chops, Bone in stew, Legs, Boneless Butterflied Legs seasoned or unseasoned, loin chops, racks, rib chops.......all of it yummy yummy
__________________
Joe Parajecki
Operations Manager/ Partner
Kettle Range Meat Company, Milwaukee WI
Member Meat Cutter Hall of Fame and The Butcher's Guild
i cut a whole lamb pretty much every other day........around holidays some times 1 or 2 lambs a day.....i sell a little bit of prepacked as well the new zealand **** ...never had it but some people tell me its garbage......but some people also request it
I get 14.99 for loin chops I can remember getting a whole lamb wrapped in muslin cloth one time and having the head cutter ask "What am I suppose to do with that?" I was a newbie, hadn't even qualified for Journeyman yet, but had been cutting meat in a hotel for 8 years at that point Well this newbie broke that lamb into primals and then showed that head cutter what to do with it
__________________
Joe Parajecki
Operations Manager/ Partner
Kettle Range Meat Company, Milwaukee WI
Member Meat Cutter Hall of Fame and The Butcher's Guild
We cut 6 whole lamb yesterday. Actually we broke 6 lamb and cut only the shoulders and sirloins. The legs, and racks were hung on trees for later. The loins were wrapped for later too. We're a little long on legs, and racks, so today we got in 5 yokes instead of the usual whole lamb. That's just the two shoulders, neck, shanks, and breast in one piece without racks or hind half.
Here's a picture of the lamb section from about 4:35 PM today
-- Edited by CarniceroLarry on Saturday 30th of April 2011 04:06:07 AM
i cut a whole lamb pretty much every other day........around holidays some times 1 or 2 lambs a day.....i sell a little bit of prepacked as well the new zealand **** ...never had it but some people tell me its garbage......but some people also request it
i get 17.61 a kg for the loin and 15.41 kg for shoulder meat and the leg meat.....and stew 13.21 a kg.....and i pay anywhere from 6.59 to 9 a kg for the lamb depending on the vender
We cut 6 whole lamb yesterday. Actually we broke 6 lamb and cut only the shoulders and sirloins. The legs, and racks were hung on trees for later. The loins were wrapped for later too. We're a little long on legs, and racks, so today we got in 5 yokes instead of the usual whole lamb. That's just the two shoulders, neck, shanks, and breast in one piece without racks or hind half.
Here's a picture of the lamb section from about 4:35 PM today
-- Edited by CarniceroLarry on Saturday 30th of April 2011 04:06:07 AM
Nice counter you have there. Americian lamb is one of my favorites next to Canadian of course.