Mains

Malone lamb racks with potatoes and quince in cider vinegar

Australian Gourmet Traveller recipe for Malone lamb racks with potatoes and quince in cider vinegar.
Malone lamb racks with potatoes and quince in cider vinegar

Malone lamb racks with potatoes and quince in cider vinegar

John Laurie
8
45M
2H
2H 45M

The quince is best when left to pickle for two weeks.

Ingredients

Quince in cider vinegar

Method

Main

1.For quince in cider vinegar, bring sugar and 800ml water to the boil in a wide saucepan over high heat. Peel quince and cut each into 6 wedges, remove seeds (leaving core intact), and place in syrup. Bring to the simmer, then place a round of baking paper directly on quince and weight with a plate. Cook over low heat with barely any bubbles until starting to colour (2 hours; see note). Remove quince from syrup and transfer to 2 sterilised 1-litre jars. Add apple cider vinegar to syrup and bring to the boil, then pour over quince, leaving 1cm air at the top of jars. Seal jars and set aside to cool completely. Quince will keep refrigerated for 2 weeks. Bring to room temperature to serve.
2.Pound herbs and garlic with a mortar and pestle to a coarse paste, add 1 tbsp oil and season to taste. Score lamb racks and rub thoroughly with herb mixture and set aside to come to room temperature.
3.Preheat oven to 180C. Place potatoes in a roasting pan lined with baking paper and brush all over with remaining oil. Heat a frying pan over high heat, add lamb and cook, turning occasionally, until browned on all sides (2-3 minutes), then place in pan with potatoes and roast until potatoes are golden and tender when pierced with a skewer and lamb is cooked to your liking (20-30 minutes for medium-rare). Set aside to rest, covered loosely with foil (20 minutes).
4.Cut lamb into cutlets and serve with potatoes and quince in cider vinegar.

Note Quince can sometimes take many hours to colour; keep the liquid barely simmering and continue cooking until they turn a deep blush pink.

Notes

Related stories