Lovely Lamb

Somali-style Lamb Shanks with Seasoned Rice

January 30, 2024
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One of my boys went to school in Minneapolis where there is a large Somali population. He fell in love with a lamb dish they did at a restaurant there, and we’ve been replicating versions of it at home ever since. From our various renditions, we think this recipe is best!  It’s made with lamb shanks slow roasted in a fabulous blend of spices and paired with seasoned rice.

Xawaash, a fragrant potpourri of cinnamon, cumin, coriander, cardamom, black pepper, clove and turmeric, is a Yemeni spice mix used in most savory Somali dishes. Here, it’s included in the paste used to season the lamb, as well as the rice (called bariis.) I referenced chef Hawa Hasan’s recipe for the Xawaash, which is then combined with vegetable oil, garlic, onion, cilantro, Kashmiri chili and smoked paprika to make the paste. You’ll coat the shanks with this, then slow roast them with vegetables for two and one half hours, making the rice during the last half hour of the meat’s cooking time.

Your reward? Falling-off-the-bone tender lamb over spiced, vegetable-flecked rice that perfectly complements the meat. Oh! And if you want to go full-on Somali-style, serve platefuls of the finished dish with a perfectly ripe, unpeeled banana next to each place setting. This may seem novel to uninitiated diners, but the banana is to be sliced and eaten between bites of the rice.

5 Comments

  • Reply A September 22, 2024 at 5:07 pm

    250 degrees what?? Celsius or Fahrenheit ????

    • Reply Monica Rogers October 1, 2025 at 7:44 pm

      250 F (Fahrenheit) Sorry that fell off! I just edited to put that back in.
      Cheers,
      MKR

  • Reply Ayisha Samiya February 6, 2025 at 8:05 am

    I have been behind this recipe since I had lamb shanks and rice from a Somalian hotel, Al Kahf in London. I tried finding out recipes from YouTube and I could not find the taste I was looking for and two days ago I found this recipe and I thought I will try my luck. I must say the dish turned out to be exactly the same. Now I do not have to travel all the way to London to have this dish. I can make at home and it is delicious. Else whenever I travel to London I automatically tend to go to eat this dish and stops me trying out any other dish. Now I can cook this at home and try other new dishes when I am London. Thank you for this recipe

  • Reply Bob August 27, 2025 at 8:26 am

    250 F or C?

    • Reply Monica Rogers October 1, 2025 at 7:43 pm

      250 F (Fahrenheit) Sorry that fell off! I just edited to put the F back in. Enjoy!
      –Monica

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