If you haven’t been to Australia, I’m 95% certain you haven’t had lamb before…and I don’t care how many you eaten, it wasn’t really lamb.

And now I wonder is the difference freshness, animal genetics, how the livestock is finished (diet wise), or is it the cooking/spicing?

If you ever get lamb shanks, look for the syndesmotic ligament between the distal tibia and fibula. It’s very rudimentary in lamb but it’s there and it’s mostly fat and almost sweet. Tiny but tasty! It’s roughly where the invisible horizontal channels are in this ankle film.

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

You lost me here doc. In the beginning, middle and end.

That’s because I’m a word smith and really good at writing. Especially after two glasses of wine.

In better words, lamb in Australia is really good. And even the shittiest cut of meat, a shank, is really good and as a bonus you get the whole anatomic leg, complete with juicy bits often overlooked.

Lamb shanks Rock!

Fact check: ✅True

Ha ha. Auzzie lamb 🇦🇺

Did you bring your X-ray generator with you here to QC your food? 😂

No, but I did bring my Radiacode portable radiation detector. But that’s mostly to monitor the monitors: I like checking to see how much xray radiation leaks out around the airport screening machines.

That looks cool!

Reasonably priced for what it can do. Performance is far better than what you would expect for its size, which comes with trade offs but they made the right trade offs.

Costco and some others sell Australia/NZ lamb cuts in the US. Just about all halal lamb in the US is from AU/NZ.