Lamb Chops with a Puy Lentil Salad
Photography Vanessa Wu.
Serves: 4
INGREDIENTS
Lamb
10-12 lamb chops
3 tablespoons olive oil
2 cloves garlic
zest and juice of 1 lemon
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
sea salt and freshly ground pepper
Dressing
2 teaspoons grain mustard
2 shallots, finely chopped
1 clove garlic, crushed
2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
5 tablespoons olive oil
Salad
200 grams puy lentils
3 vine-ripened tomatoes, diced
½ telegraph cucumber
3 tablespoons capers
1 avocado, diced
large handful flat-leaf parsley, roughly chopped
To serve
1 cup thick plain yoghurt
1-2 tablespoons harissa
METHOD
Lamb: Trim the chops of excess fat and tie with kitchen string. Whisk the oil with the remaining ingredients and season with salt and freshly ground pepper. Coat the lamb and leave for 30 minutes.
Dressing: Whisk all the ingredients together and season.
Salad: Cook the lentils in boiling salted water until tender. Drain well and tip into a bowl. Add the dressing while the lentils are still hot and gently combine. Leave to cool.
Halve the cucumber lengthways and scrape out the seeds with a teaspoon. Dice and stir into the lentils along with the remaining salad ingredients.
Lamb: Preheat a sauté pan or ridged grill. Cook the lamb until crisp and golden on the outside and just a touch pink inside. Rest loosely covered, for 5 minutes.
To serve: Put the yoghurt in a bowl and stir through the harissa. Place the lamb chops on a platter and garnish with lemon wedges. Serve with the lentil salad, crusty bread and the yoghurt.
Pantry Notes: Puy Lentils are small slate-green lentils that have a delicate blue marbling. They are considered by many to be the best lentil because of their unique peppery flavour and the fact they hold their shape during cooking. They’re the only lentil to be identified by area of cultivation – grown in the Le Puy region of France.
Harissa [ha-ritha]: a fiery hot sauce from North Africa made from chilli, garlic, cumin, coriander and caraway.
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We start by sharing what’s on the dish team’s radar, what we’re watching, listening to and reading. Harry Butterfield puts a twist on his Nonna’s agnolotti, Malissa Fedele reminds us of the importance of fibre, and Phoebe Holden fulfils a long-held dream, sitting down with Yotam Ottolenghi. Autumn is an abundant time, we make the most with pumpkin, kūmara, cabbage, cauliflower, feijoas, apples and pears. We’re dishing up dinners for two, including a Chicken Dumpling Lasagne, alongside easy weeknight meals. We honour our mums, revisit timeless classics, and add a little baking challenge. This issue, we encourage you to slow down, to enjoy writing your shopping list, and spending time in the kitchen. Because even when life feels relentless, there’s always space to share something delicious.







