Recipe Blackened lamb loin chops

teamfat

Senior Member
Joined
6 Jan 2020
Local time
10:57 PM
Messages
56
Location
Salt Lake City
I bought some little lamb T bones.

20250628_181231.jpg


Decided to blacken them. And of course, to blacken anything, you need blackening seasoning. If you ask a dozen Cajun cooks and a dozen Creole cooks, you'll get two dozen recipes. Mine is pretty basic, sort of a base foundation.

2 T Paprika
1 T salt
2 t onion powder
2 t garlic powder
2 t black pepper
1 t dried thyme
1 t dried oregano
ground cayenne to taste

Yes, I could have used weight, but I was too lazy, The paprika can be sweet, smoked, or hot, or any combo of the three. I used half smoked, half hot for this batch. So I went light on the cayenne, a scant half teaspoon.

You also need about a quarter stick ( 4 Tbsp ) of butter. Salted is fine.


20250705_203152.jpg


Mix the spices together until well blended. A small whisk or a fork will do the trick.

Pat the lamb dry. Coat with the seasoning mix.

20250705_212645.jpg


Let sit for about an hour, give the spices a chance to adhere. I used about half the blackening mix for these three chops, saved the rest in an empty spice jar. Your mileage may vary.

The blackening technique generates a lot of smoke. If you have a killer range hood that can suck up household pets, then feel free to do this in the kitchen. I used a portable burner out on the front porch.

Melt the butter. You can use the microwave if you have to, stovetop if that works for you. What I do is put the butter in a metal measuring cup and place it in the skillet as the skillet warms up.

Heat a clean, dry cast iron skillet over rocket hot heat.

20250705_213820.jpg


Yes, a bad, poorly focused photo. So it goes.

Brush generous amounts of butter over the seasoned chops. Place in the skillet.

20250705_214533.jpg


These have been cooking for a couple of minutes, so a lot of the smoke has cleared. Yes, you are cooking them at well past the smoke point of the butter. recently I made some blackened shrimp, and when they hit the pan they actually burst into flames. That was festive!

Cook for about 3 - 4 minutes per side, depending on how you like your lamb. I prefer mine rare, such that a good vet can get it back on its feet. Remove to serving platter, cutting board, plate or whatever.

20250705_214939.jpg


If done right, they should be blackened, not burnt. You can see that under the coating the meat is still moist and juicy.

Now here is where I would put the money shot, a chop or two plated along with a side dish or garnishes. I was hungry. Never took the picture. remembered it as I was staring at an empty plate. Burp. Perhaps if I had served it with from scratch red beans and rice I would have taken the photo. But it was just a box mix of Zatarains, hardly photo worthy.

All in all, a good meal!

mjb.
 
teamfat you've convinced me that I need one of those portable gas burners, that I've been tossing around for some time.
In some cases, cooking out doors is best, as I do any frying in the back yard (learned this from a nice Japanese gal back in Hawaii ... all of the mess and smoke stays outside). Our neighbor will get a whiff and poke her head over the garden wall, "whatcha cookin'?" and I give her a taste.
 
Pretty much every Asian market I have ever been in has these butane powered, single burner units. I don't use mine that often, but when I do it is exactly what I need. And they aren't that expensive, low end units are in the 25 - 30 dollar range. If you want you can spend around 200 bucks for a really nice one.

mjb.
 
I have a cast iron electric single burner I use on my table when making fondue. Never thought to take it outside.
 
Back
Top Bottom