Ardshane House Irish Stew
Submitted by seira
Ardshane House Irish stew is an authentic lamb-and-potato slow simmer with pearl barley and a homemade scratch stock. Six ingredients, two hours, and a hearty result that feeds eight.
YIELD
8 servingsPREP
30 minCOOK
120 minREADY
150 minArdshane House Irish stew is the kind of recipe that comes from someone who actually grew up on it, not from a glossy magazine spread. Six ingredients (lamb middle neck, potatoes, onions, pearl barley, stock, and seasoning) cook into a rib-sticking pot of pure comfort that defines old-school Irish cooking.
Middle neck is the right cut. The bones and connective tissue dissolve into the broth during the long simmer, building body that boneless cuts cannot match. Boneless leg or shoulder works in a pinch, but you lose the mineral richness the bones bring.
Pearl barley is the underrated star. As it simmers, it releases starch that thickens the broth into a glossy, slightly silky consistency. Two ounces is the right amount: enough to add body without turning the stew into porridge.
The traditional stock here is built from kitchen scraps including potato peelings, carrot tops, leek ends, and any lamb bones lying around. That improvised approach is what gives a real Irish stew its depth. Plain canned beef stock works but tastes thinner.
Pro Tips
- Layer ingredients in the pot rather than mixing them. Lamb on the bottom, potatoes on top, with onions and barley scattered between. The layers release flavors at different rates.
- Skim the foam aggressively during the first 30 minutes of simmering. Foam is rendered fat and protein scum that makes the broth murky if left in.
- Cut potatoes into chunks rather than slices. Slices break down into the broth; chunks stay distinct.
- This tastes better the next day. The flavors deepen and the fat solidifies on top for easy removal.
Variations
Ingredients
Directions
That’s the basic recipe. You can add a load of sliced carrots and leeks to make it go further and about 5 to 6 tablespoons of Worchestershire sauce or regular brown sauce wot you Yanks pour over everything!!
If you like, you could add a half a pint of Guinness to your stock. I make my stock from the potato peelings, carrot tops, leek ends, and any other stuff I find lurking in the refrigerator. If you chuck in a few moldy lamb bones and boil/simmer for several hours, you should get a damned good stock (strain the liquid or you’ll get God knows what stuck in your teeth!!) You’ll need to start with about 5 pints of liquid.
Then bung everything into a ginormous pan, bring to the boil, and then simmer for about two hours...should taste bloody orgasmic! Salt and pepper to taste, depending on your level of drunkeness!!
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