Recipe by : chef ssentongo
> * This is BRAISED LAMB SHANKS — fall-off-the-bone tender in a rich, glossy red wine + tomato gravy. That deep mahogany color + thyme + sticky sauce = classic comfort.
Red Wine Braised Lamb Shanks
Serves 4 | Time: 3.5 hours, 20 min active

Ingredients
For the Lamb
- 4 lamb shanks, 400-500g each, frenched like in photo
- 2 tbsp olive oil
- 3 tbsp flour, for dusting
- 2 tsp salt, 1 tsp black pepper
- 1 tsp garlic powder
For the Braising Liquid
- 1 large onion, diced
- 2 carrots, diced
- 2 celery stalks, diced
- 6 garlic cloves, smashed
- 3 tbsp tomato paste
- 2 cups dry red wine, Cabernet or Merlot
- 3 cups beef stock, good quality
- 2 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
- 2 bay leaves
- 1 tbsp fresh rosemary, chopped
- 6 sprigs fresh thyme + more for garnish
- 1 tbsp brown sugar, balances acidity
To Finish
- 2 tbsp butter, cold
- 2 tbsp fresh parsley, chopped
- Salt + pepper to taste
Method
1. Prep + sear: Heat oven to 160°C. Pat shanks dry. Mix flour + salt + pepper + garlic powder. Dust shanks, shake off excess. Heat oil in heavy Dutch oven on high. Sear shanks 3-4 min per side until deep brown like photo. Don’t crowd. Remove to plate.
2. Soffritto: Same pot, medium heat. Add onion + carrot + celery + pinch salt. Cook 8-10 min until soft and starting to caramelize. Add garlic 1 min.
3. Tomato base: Add tomato paste. Cook 3 min, stirring, until it darkens to brick red. This = deep color + no raw tomato taste.
4. Deglaze: Pour in red wine. Scrape all browned bits — that’s flavor. Boil hard 5 min until reduced by half and alcohol smell is gone.
5. Braise: Add stock + Worcestershire + bay + rosemary + thyme + brown sugar. Return shanks + any juices. Liquid should come ¾ up shanks. Bring to simmer.
6. Oven: Cover tightly. Braise 2.5-3 hours until meat is falling off bone and tender. Turn shanks once halfway.
7. Reduce sauce: Remove shanks to plate, tent with foil. Strain liquid into saucepan, press veg to extract flavor. Discard solids. Simmer liquid 10-15 min until thick, glossy, and coats spoon like photo. Should reduce to ∼1.5 cups.
8. Finish: Off heat, swirl in cold butter for shine. Taste for salt + pepper. Add splash of lemon juice if too rich.
9. Serve: Return shanks to sauce to reheat 2 min. Spoon sauce over. Garnish with fresh thyme + parsley like photo.
Tips for Photo Look
- Color: Searing + tomato paste cooked dark + red wine reduction = that mahogany glaze. If sauce is pale, you didn’t reduce enough.
- Gloss: Cold butter swirled in at end = restaurant shine.
- Frenched bones: Ask butcher to clean bones. Makes it look pro and easier to eat.
- Herbs: Fresh thyme sprigs added at end stay bright green vs black if cooked 3 hours.
- Tenderness: If meat isn’t falling off bone, it needs more time. Lamb shank is tough until it isn’t.
Key Notes
Wine: You’ll taste it. Use a bottle you’d drink. No alcohol? Sub 1 cup extra stock + 2 tbsp balsamic + 2 tbsp tomato paste.
Stock: Good stock = good sauce. Cube stock works but add 1 tsp gelatin to mimic body.
Flour: Dusting helps thicken sauce and gives better sear. Skip for gluten-free and reduce sauce longer.
Dutch oven: Cast iron holds heat best. No oven-safe pot? Simmer stovetop 3 hrs on lowest heat, lid ajar.
What to Serve With
The sauce demands something to soak it up:
- Creamy mashed potatoes: Classic
- Polenta: Soft + buttery
- Parmesan risotto: Fancy
- Crusty bread: Simplest
Make-Ahead
Actually better next day. Cool shanks in sauce, fridge overnight. Fat rises, skim it, reheat gently 30 min at 160°C. Flavor deepens.
In Juba
Lamb shanks: Check major butchers or supermarkets. No red wine: Use stock + balsamic + 1 tsp coffee for depth. Fresh thyme: 1 tsp dried = 1 tbsp fresh.
Common Mistakes
- Tough meat: Didn’t braise long enough. 2 hrs minimum, 3 hrs better.
- Watery sauce: Didn’t reduce after straining. Should be like maple syrup.
- Bitter: Burned tomato paste or didn’t reduce wine enough. Cook paste slow, boil wine hard.
This is Sunday dinner or holiday-level food. Rich, sticky, and the bone marrow melts into the sauce.
Want a Moroccan version with apricots + cinnamon, or pressure cooker method to cut time to 1 hour?
> * This is ROAST DUCK WITH ORANGE -HONEY GLAZE , DUCK FAT POTATOES & CRANBERRY SAUCE — holiday showstopper. That mahogany lacquered skin + whole roasted potatoes + fresh herbs = perfect Christmas or celebration centerpiece.
Honey-Orange Glazed Roast Duck
Serves 4-6 | Time: 3 hours, 20 min active

1. The Duck
Ingredients
- 1 whole duck, 2-2.5kg, giblets removed
- 2 tbsp salt
- 1 tsp black pepper
- 1 orange, quartered
- 1 head garlic, halved
- 6 sprigs thyme + 3 sprigs rosemary
For the Glaze — gives that shine in photo
- ⅓ cup honey
- ¼ cup orange juice, fresh
- 2 tbsp soy sauce
- 1 tbsp balsamic vinegar
- 1 tsp five-spice powder, optional but amazing with duck
- Zest from 1 orange
2. Duck Fat Potatoes — around the duck in photo
- 1kg baby potatoes, halved if large
- 3 tbsp reserved duck fat from roasting
- Salt + pepper
- 4 garlic cloves, smashed
- Extra thyme sprigs
3. Cranberry Sauce — bowl in photo
- 300g fresh or frozen cranberries
- ½ cup orange juice
- ⅓ cup sugar
- 2 tbsp honey
- Zest from 1 orange
- 1 cinnamon stick
- Pinch salt
Method
Day Before: Dry the skin
- Score: Pat duck very dry. Score skin in diamond pattern, cutting through fat but not into meat. This renders fat for crispy skin.
- Salt: Rub inside + out with salt + pepper. Leave uncovered in fridge overnight. This dries skin = crispy like photo.
Roast Day
3. Prep: Heat oven to 220°C. Prick duck all over with fork, especially fatty areas. Stuff cavity with orange quarters + garlic + herbs. Truss legs.
4. First roast: Place duck on rack in roasting pan, breast up. Roast 30 min at 220°C. Reduce to 180°C.
5. Render fat: Every 20 min, prick skin again and spoon off fat from pan — save it. This is duck fat for potatoes. Roast 1 hr 30 min total, until 70°C in thigh.
6. Potatoes: After 45 min of duck roasting, toss potatoes in 3 tbsp hot duck fat + salt + pepper + garlic + thyme. Add to pan around duck. They’ll roast 45-50 min until golden like photo.
7. Make glaze: Simmer all glaze ingredients 5 min until syrupy.
8. Glaze duck: Last 20 min, brush duck with glaze every 5 min. Final 5 min, 220°C to caramelize glaze to mahogany shine.
9. Rest: Rest duck 15 min before carving. Skin stays crisp if you don’t cover.
10. Cranberry sauce: While duck rests, boil cranberries + juice + sugar + honey + zest + cinnamon 10 min until berries burst. Cool. Chunky style like in photo.
11. Serve: Carve duck. Plate with duck fat potatoes + herbs + cranberry sauce on side. Garnish platter with fresh rosemary + thyme like photo.
Tips for Photo Look
- Skin: Dry brining overnight + scoring + high heat start = that blistered, lacquered skin. Wet duck = flabby skin.
- Color: Honey + soy + balsamic in glaze = deep mahogany. Orange juice keeps it from burning.
- Potatoes: Roasted in duck fat = golden + flavor. They get coated in glaze drippings too.
- Herbs: Fresh rosemary + thyme sprigs added at end for green contrast. If baked 2 hrs they’ll be black.
- Grapes: Photo has grapes + cranberries. Toss red grapes in last 10 min for blistered look.
Key Notes
Duck is fatty: You’ll render 1-2 cups of fat. Save it — gold for roasting veg or frying eggs.
Doneness: Duck breast can be 60°C pink, but legs need 75°C to be tender. 70°C in thigh is safe middle ground. Unlike chicken, pink duck is fine.
No five-spice: Use ¼ tsp cinnamon + ¼ tsp ground star anise + pinch cloves.
Gamey: Duck is richer than chicken. Orange glaze + cranberry sauce cut it perfectly.
Timeline
Day before: Salt duck, make cranberry sauce.
Day of: 3 hours before dinner, start roasting.
Total active: 30 min. Most is oven time.
In Juba
Duck: Check specialty butchers or imported meat shops. No fresh cranberries: Use 300g frozen or sub red currant/cherry jam + 1 tbsp lemon juice. Five-spice: Find in spice section or skip.
Common Mistakes
- Soggy skin: Didn’t dry overnight or didn’t prick/render enough.
- Burnt glaze: Added too early. Only last 20 min.
- Dry meat: Overcooked. Pull at 70°C thigh temp.
- Too fatty: Didn’t drain fat during roasting. Duck needs multiple draining sessions.
Carving
Remove legs/thighs first. Slice breast meat off bone. One duck serves 4 generously, 6 with sides.
This beats turkey for holidays — richer flavor, crispier skin, and those duck fat potatoes are unreal.
Want a Chinese-style Peking duck method for even crispier skin, or confit duck legs if you can’t find whole duck?
> * These are CREAMY SPINACH & MUSHROOM STUFFED SWEET POTATOES — those charred skins + bright orange flesh + cheesy garlic spinach filling = healthy comfort food that looks fancy.

Stuffed Sweet Potatoes with Creamy Spinach Mushroom
Serves 4 | Time: 1 hour
Ingredients
For the Sweet Potatoes
- 4 medium sweet potatoes, 250-300g each
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- ½ tsp salt
For the Creamy Filling
- 2 tbsp olive oil + 1 tbsp butter
- 300g cremini or button mushrooms, sliced
- 4 garlic cloves, minced
- 1 small shallot, minced
- 200g fresh spinach, roughly chopped
- 120g cream cheese, softened
- ¼ cup heavy cream or whole milk
- ½ cup mozzarella, shredded
- ¼ cup Parmigiano-Reggiano, grated + more for topping
- ½ tsp garlic powder
- ¼ tsp nutmeg
- ¼ tsp chili flakes, optional
- Salt + black pepper to taste
To Finish
- 2 tbsp fresh chives or parsley, minced
- Extra chili flakes
- Cracked black pepper
Method
1. Bake potatoes: Heat oven to 200°C. Scrub sweet potatoes, pierce 4-5 times with fork. Rub with oil + salt. Bake directly on rack 45-50 min until tender and skins are slightly charred like photo. A knife should slide in easily.
2. Sauté mushrooms: While potatoes bake, heat oil + butter in large skillet on medium-high. Add mushrooms + pinch salt. Cook 6-8 min until golden brown and liquid evaporates. Don’t crowd pan or they steam.
3. Make filling base: Add shallot to mushrooms, cook 2 min. Add garlic + chili flakes 30 sec until fragrant.
4. Wilt spinach: Add spinach in batches. Stir until just wilted, 2 min. Don’t overcook or it goes khaki.
5. Make it creamy: Reduce heat to low. Add cream cheese + heavy cream. Stir until melted and smooth. Add mozzarella + Parm + garlic powder + nutmeg. Stir until cheese melts. Sauce should be thick, not runny. Taste for salt + pepper.
6. Stuff: Slice potatoes lengthwise, don’t cut all the way through. Gently push ends to open. Fluff flesh with fork, leave 1cm border. Pile hot spinach-mushroom filling into each potato.
7. Broil: Top with extra Parm. Broil 2-3 min until golden and bubbly like photo. Watch closely.
8. Finish: Sprinkle with chives + chili flakes + cracked pepper.
Tips for Photo Look
- Skin: Bake at high heat 200°C for those dark charred spots. Rubbing with oil helps.
- Orange flesh: Use Jewel or Garnet sweet potatoes — they’re brightest orange.
- Filling texture: Cream cheese + mozzarella = thick + gooey, not soupy. If too loose, simmer 1 min more.
- Green color: Add spinach last minute. Overcooked spinach = dull brown.
- Cheese pull: Mozzarella gives stretch. Broiling gives golden spots.
- Herbs: Fresh chives on top = color pop. Add after broiling.
Key Notes
Sweet potato swap: Regular russet potatoes work but won’t be as sweet. Baking time similar.
Lighter version: Sub cream cheese for Greek yogurt + 2 tbsp milk. Use part-skim mozzarella. Still creamy.
Make ahead: Bake potatoes + make filling 1 day before. Stuff + broil before serving. Add 2 min to broil time from cold.
No broiler: Bake at 220°C for 5-7 min until top is golden.
Add protein: Stir in 1 cup shredded rotisserie chicken or crispy bacon bits to filling.
Why This Works
Sweet + savory balance. Sweet potato is naturally sweet, filling is garlicky, salty, umami from mushrooms + parmesan. It’s vegetarian, filling, and feels indulgent without being heavy.
In Juba
Sweet potatoes are common. Cream cheese: Available at major supermarkets. No shallot? Use ¼ small onion. Mozzarella: Any melty cheese works — gouda or edam.
Total time: 1 hour, 15 min active. Feeds 4 as main, 8 as side.
This is meal-prep friendly and perfect for fall. The combo tastes like steakhouse creamed spinach stuffed into a sweet potato.
Want a vegan version with cashew cream, or Mexican twist with black beans + chipotle?
> * This is OSSO BUCO — classic Milanese braised veal shanks. Those cross-cut bones with marrow + rich tomato sauce + fresh parsley = Italian comfort food. The marrow in the center is the best part.

Osso Buco alla Milanese
Serves 4 | Time: 3 hours, 25 min active
Ingredients
For the Veal Shanks
- 4 veal shanks, 5cm thick, 350-400g each
- 3 tbsp flour, for dusting
- 2 tsp salt, 1 tsp black pepper
- 3 tbsp olive oil
- 2 tbsp butter
For the Braising Sauce
- 1 large onion, diced fine
- 2 carrots, diced fine
- 2 celery stalks, diced fine
- 4 garlic cloves, minced
- 3 tbsp tomato paste
- 1 cup dry white wine
- 1 can 400g crushed tomatoes
- 2 cups veal or beef stock, good quality
- 1 bay leaf
- 4 sprigs fresh thyme
- 1 strip orange zest, 5cm, no white pith
- 1 tsp salt + ½ tsp black pepper
For the Gremolata — fresh topping in photo
- ¼ cup fresh parsley, minced fine
- Zest from 1 lemon
- 1 garlic clove, minced to paste
Method
1. Prep shanks: Heat oven to 165°C. Pat shanks very dry. Tie each with kitchen twine around circumference so they don’t fall apart. Season with salt + pepper, dust lightly with flour, shake off excess.
2. Sear: Heat heavy Dutch oven on medium-high. Add oil + 1 tbsp butter. Sear shanks 4-5 min per side until deep golden brown. That crust = flavor + color in photo. Work in batches. Remove to plate.
3. Soffritto: Same pot, medium heat. Add onion + carrot + celery + pinch salt. Cook 8-10 min until soft and starting to brown. Add garlic 1 min.
4. Tomato base: Add tomato paste. Cook 3 min, stirring, until it darkens to brick red and smells sweet. This kills raw tomato taste and gives deep color.
5. Deglaze: Pour in white wine. Scrape browned bits from pan. Boil 3 min until reduced by half and alcohol smell is gone.
6. Braise: Add crushed tomatoes + stock + bay + thyme + orange zest + salt + pepper. Return shanks + any juices. Liquid should come ¾ up sides. Bring to simmer.
7. Oven: Cover tightly. Braise 2-2.5 hours until meat is fork-tender and nearly falling off bone. Turn shanks once halfway.
8. Gremolata: Mix parsley + lemon zest + garlic. This fresh topping cuts the richness — essential.
9. Finish sauce: Remove shanks to warm platter, tent with foil. Discard bay + thyme + orange zest. Simmer sauce 5-10 min until thick enough to coat spoon. Should be glossy like photo. Stir in 1 tbsp butter off heat for shine. Taste for salt.
10. Serve: Spoon sauce over shanks. Top generously with gremolata like photo. Serve with marrow spoon for the bone.
Tips for Photo Look
- Bone + marrow: That hollow bone with soft marrow in center is signature Osso Buco. Use veal shank, not beef — veal is more tender.
- Sauce color: Tomato paste cooked dark + reduced wine + crushed tomatoes = deep red-orange. If pale, you didn’t cook paste enough.
- Gremolata: Bright green parsley + yellow zest. Add only at serving or it wilts and turns black.
- Twine: Keeps shank shape during 2+ hour braise so it looks neat like photo, not shredded.
- Gloss: Butter swirled in at end = restaurant shine.
Key Notes
Veal vs beef: Traditional is veal — milder, more tender. Beef shank works but needs 3-3.5 hrs. Flavor is stronger.
Wine: Dry white is classic Milanese. Red wine makes it heavier, more like a stew. Both work.
Stock: Veal stock is traditional but beef stock is fine. Cube stock + 1 tsp gelatin mimics body.
Orange zest: Secret ingredient. Adds brightness without tasting orangey. Don’t skip.
Marrow: The prize. Spread it on toast or mix into risotto. That’s why you serve it bone-in.
What to Serve With
Risotto alla Milanese: Saffron risotto is the traditional pairing. The yellow + red is iconic.
Polenta: Soft + creamy catches sauce.
Mashed potatoes: Simple + soaks up gravy.
Make-Ahead
Better next day. Cool shanks in sauce, fridge overnight. Fat rises, skim it. Reheat gently 30 min at 160°C. Gremolata must be fresh.
In Juba
Veal shanks: Ask butchers for veal osso buco cut. If unavailable, use beef shank — cook 3.5 hrs. White wine: Dry white or use all stock + 1 tbsp white vinegar. Orange: Use zest only, not juice.
Common Mistakes
- Tough meat: Didn’t braise long enough. Shank is tough until 2 hrs in. Test with fork.
- Watery sauce: Didn’t reduce after removing shanks. Should be like marinara, not soup.
- Bland: Under-seasoned. Salt at every step: shanks, veg, sauce.
- Fell apart: Didn’t tie with twine or overcooked. 2.5 hrs is sweet spot.
This is Sunday dinner in Italy — rustic, rich, and the marrow + gremolata combo is unreal.
Want a slow cooker version or lamb shank swap if veal is hard to find?


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