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The lamb morsels in this Lamb Stew just melt in your mouth and so do the potatoes. This recipe is uncomplicated (a one-pot meal!) and it simmers in the oven for awhile so every bite is completely delicious. The lengthy (and care free) baking time creates a most satisfying broth consistency. Even if you have no clue what the old days were like, this lamb stew will take you there!
My 2 and 8-year old kiddos both loved this lamb stew (which shocked me because they love their usuals like Mom’s meatball soup and borscht). They both asked for refills! I was beaming of course because this lamb stew recipe is loaded with healthy ingredients and my family was was gobbling it up with such satisfaction. It’s a winner, especially for special occasions, like Easter!
Ingredients for Lamb Stew Recipe:
This hearty lamb stew is a meal in itself and so satisfying! This lamb stew recipe is a close relative to our beef stew recipe (a reader favorite!). We turned it into a one-pot recipe so it is easier and a little heartier with more potatoes. We also experimented making it gluten free and we were all so impressed with the results.
Gluten Free Substitution: I have tested this with this gluten free flour and it worked wonderfully.
How to Make Easy Lamb Stew:
1. In a large dutch oven pot, saute chopped bacon over medium heat until golden brown and fat is released. Remove bacon with a slotted spoon to a large plate.
2. While bacon cooks, season trimmed and chopped lamb pieces with 1/2 Tbsp salt and 1 tsp black pepper. Sprinkle with 1/4 cup flour. Toss to combine and coat the meat in flour. Cook the lamb in 2 batches in hot bacon grease over medium heat until browned (3-4 minutes per side) then remove to the same plate with bacon.
3. Add diced onion and sauté 2 minutes. Add garlic and sauté another minute, stirring constantly. Add 1 1/2 cups wine, scraping the bottom to deglaze. Add thickly sliced mushrooms, bring to a simmer and cook 10 minutes uncovered. Preheat Oven to 325 degrees F.
4. Return bacon and lamb back to the pot then add 4 cups broth, 1 Tbsp tomato paste, 1 tsp salt, 1/2 tsp pepper, 1/2 tsp dried thyme and 2 bay leaves. Add potatoes and carrots then stir to combine (potatoes should be mostly submerged in liquid. Bring to a boil then cover with lid and carefully transfer to preheated oven at 325˚F for 1 hour and 45 minutes. When done, potatoes will be easily pierced and lamb will be very tender. For a lower fat stew, spoon out any excess oil at the surface of the stew.
Serve with soft crusty bread to soak up that broth which is loaded with amazing flavor!
Explore our Most Popular Stew Recipes:
- Beef, Rice and Tomato Stew (Kharcho)
- Red Borscht (a beef and beet stew)
- If you love lamb, don’t miss our Lamb Chops
Lamb Stew Recipe

Ingredients
- 4 oz bacon, (4 strips, chopped into 1/4" strips)
- 2 lbs boneless leg of lamb or lamb shoulder, trimmed of excess fat, cut into 1 1/2" pieces
- 1/2 Tbsp sea salt for the lamb plus 1 tsp for stew
- 1 tsp black pepper for lamb plus 1/2 tsp for stew
- 1/4 cup all-purpose flour or gluten free flour*
- 1 large yellow onion, diced
- 4 garlic cloves, minced
- 1 1/2 cups good red wine, *
- 1 lb button mushrooms, thickly sliced
- 4 cups low sodium beef broth or stock
- 1 Tbsp tomato paste
- 2 bay leaves
- 1/2 tsp dried thyme
- 1 1/2 lbs small yellow potatoes, halved or quartered into 1" pieces
- 4 medium carrots, 10 oz, peeled and cut into 1/2" thick pieces
- 1/4 cup parsley, finely chopped for garnish
Instructions
- In a 5Qt dutch oven, saute chopped bacon over medium heat until browned and fat released. With a slotted spoon, transfer bacon to a large plate.
- While bacon cooks, season lamb pieces with 1/2 Tbsp salt and 1 tsp pepper. Sprinkle with 1/4 cup flour and toss to coat. Cook lamb in 2 batches in hot bacon grease over medium heat until browned (3-4 min per side) then transfer to the plate with bacon.
- Add diced onion and sauté 2 min. Add garlic and cook another minute, stirring constantly. Add 1 1/2 cups wine, scraping the bottom to deglaze. Add sliced mushrooms, bring to simmer then cook uncovered 10 min. Preheat Oven to 325˚F.
- Return bacon and lamb to pot and add 4 cups broth, 1 Tbsp tomato paste, 1 tsp salt, 1/2 tsp pepper, 1/2 tsp dried thyme and 2 bay leaves. Stir in potatoes and carrots, making sure potatoes are mostly submerged in liquid. Bring to a boil then COVER and carefully transfer to preheated oven at 325˚F for 1 hr and 45 min. When done, potatoes and lamb will be very tender.**
Notes
** For reduced fat stew, spoon out any excess oil from the surface when it comes out of the oven.
Nutrition Per Serving
If you make this recipe, I’d love to see pics of your creations on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter! Hashtag them #natashaskitchen
Q: Are you cooking up any special Easter recipes?
Is lamb typically on the menu for you? I’d love to hear about your Easter dinner traditions!
Hi, I have a lamb bone with lots of meat left on it. Could I use this instead of cut up lamb?
Thanks!
Hi Sandy! I think you could, but I haven’t tested it myself to provide instructions for how to prepare the meat with the bone in. Let us know if you experiment with it.
Plan to make it this weekend. Ever make it up to the point of adding carrots and potatoes and refrigerate over night? Then I can skim some of the fat, reheat it, add carrots and potatoes and throw it in the oven the next day. Thoughts?
Hi Steve! I have not tried that to advise.
As usual another keeper from Natasha. This recipe was fantastic!!
Thank you for the perfect rating, we appreciate it!
This recipe was absolutely amazing !!! My whole family and neighbors loved this dish! Everything about it was perfect … please do yourself the favor of making it too!
Thank you for the amazing review, Shannon. We appreciate it!
SO GOOD! I grew up eating lamb, but this was my first time cooking with it myself, and this recipe was so easy and delicious. Will definitely be making again.
Thank you for trying this recipe, Samantha. We’re happy to know that you like it!
Absolutely beautiful. I normally add to mush ingredients when cooking a stew parsnips an turnips ec and its my first time using lamb 😋
Glad you like this recipe, Kelly!
Would it work to double this recipe? I need to feed a crowd!
Hi there, one of our readers shared this comment “Just made this tonight in my extra large dutch oven. Doubled the recipe and followed it exactly and it came out PERFECT. This is a keeper and will become a beloved favorite!” Hope that helps!
I enjoyed making and eating this lamb stew. One of the best. As usual, I always think of “what is missing here?” After taking the stew out of the oven, I added 2/3 cup of good red wine mixed with 1 Tbl. of corn starch and 2 tsp. of finely chopped fresh rosemary. Stirring additional wine with corn starch at the end, gave the stew a fresher nuttier taste and thickened the juices.
Thank you for sharing your experience trying this recipe, Maria. Good to know that you enjoyed the process and the result!
Absolutely delicious! Didn’t have bacon, but did have bacon fat so used that to sauté the onions, 4 small stalks of celery and the mushrooms. Also used beef bone broth. Otherwise, followed the recipe exactly. It was fabulous, we liked that that the beef broth mellowed the lamb flavor. You can definitely still taste it is lamb though, no worries there. The lamb was sooo tender, it melted in our mouths! Exceptional recipe, really well balanced flavors. Thank you for sharing the recipe🍁
You’re very welcome! I’m glad you loved it. Thank you for the review.
Tried your recipe after wife turned up her nose at Lamb Cassoulet! Used a kilo of boned lamb shoulder from specialist butcher and a Lamguedoc Pinot Noir and otherwise followed your narrative. Worked really well and was even better a week later (frozen in the interim). THANK YOU. 😋 ..!!
You’re welcome! Thank you for sharing, Dennis! I’m glad to hear that.
I made this for dinner tonight. We’re still unpacking at our new home so I decided before starting to make it in the Crockpot brand instant pot. I followed basically everything but had to use fingerling potatoes (store was out of the other) and decided to use baby carrots to look cute with the potatoes. We got lamb ‘stew meat’ that was organic and grass fed from our grocery. I believe it was killed and butchered by a lawnmower because I had to spend half an hour cleaning it up. Followed recipe up to the baking point and set our little cooker on Meat/Stew for the full time (35 minutes on high pressure). It was delicious. Everything was so tender you could cut it with a fork or spoon. I think my husband ate 3 bowls! Next time I’m going to make an Irish soda bread to eat with it. Thanks for the recipe!
Congratulations on your new home, Tracy! That’s so exciting! I’m so glad you both loved this recipe!
This was the perfect recipe! Used the Pinot noir in the recipe, drank a glass while making it LOL and opened another to have with dinner! Your recipe was easy and delicious! I served it with some homemade rosemary bread! My husband had 2 servings it was so good! The texture and the gravy were perfect! Cheers to you Natasha! I’m impressed!
Thank you so much for sharing that with me, Linda! I’m so glad you enjoyed this stew!
Oh, and to keep a stock of bacon fat, put a whole 1 Lb. of bacon in a large sheet pan with sides and lay the strips right next to each other, sparating them as they shrink and pour of the fat into a stainless steel, ceramic or heat-proof glass container with a lid; Once you have accumulated about 1.5 cups, let cool to room temperature and keep in the fridge until you need (the bacon can go in a zip-lock bag in the freezer).
I just got out of the hospital and fasting for an operation; When I did get t eat again, the fish and chicken looked the same (dry and over cooked), vegetable were canned and I was lucky they allowed me to have clear bone broth. When I got home, I found Natasha’s recipe. I used real chicken and beef bone broth, lots of rosemary (6 long sprigs), Shiitake Mushroom powder, double the garlic listed in this recipe, no wine or tomato (as both of those reduce the flavor of the meat. Too bad the U.S. only gets only lamb because Mutton (just 1-3 years older than a yearling) has so much more flavor. I am so grateful for this recipe, because it gave me a starting point to start eating real food again; Thank you, Natasha.
I’m so glad you found this recipe, Alicia! I hope your recovery is quick and painless. Blessings to you!
I am a lamb lover but DH is not. Does the wrinkly nose thing if its anything but loin lamb chops. Well he was over the moon with this recipe! As was I. Didn’t really change anything significant. Used 3 shoulder chops which was a bit of a pain to cut the meat off the bone. Next time Lamb Shanks! Just the two of us so one large carrot coined and like wise with one parsnip. YF small potatoes cut in half (all of these peeled of course) at the 45 Min point someone suggested. Worked perfectly. A little cumin and caraway. Halved the recipe as only the two of us. Absolutely delicious! Definitely will make again!
Shanks vs. Shoulder – definitely my choice. Bones from Shoulder (which I added for the meat/marrow/flavor) came apart enough they were hard to corral. 🤨
Thanks for a great recipe!
Thank you so much for sharing that with me, Holly! I’m glad you both loved this recipe!
Is there a stovetop method I don’t have a pan I can use to put in oven.
Hi Nic, one of readers shared this “I used leftover lamb from the Holiday, and instead of in the oven I simmered it on the stovetop. DELICIOUS!” I hope that helps.
Added: Omani dried lemon, coriander powder, chili flakes, a bit of cinnamon, and fresh rosemary
substituted: bone in lamb (much more savory), oyster mushrooms (yum!), fresh thyme, homemade chicken broth (also yum!), 125g tomato paste
cut: bacon
Also, I don’t bother taking the meat out of the pot then adding it again later. Just keep tossing things in till done.
Results, delicious!
Thank you so much for sharing that with me, Ez! I’m glad you enjoyed it!
Excellent!! I have made this a few times and will make it again. Try it I think you will like it.
Thank you for the wonderful feedback, Rick! I’m so glad you love this recipe.
I’ve made this Lamb Stew 10 or 12 times now… I love it more every time I make it…Thank You!
Love it! Thank you so much for your good comments and feedback!
Thank you for this recipe. I made it about a month ago and it was really good. I’m going to attempt to make it again tomorrow but with venison that has been lurking in my freezer instead of lamb, I’ll let you know how that goes…
I hope you love it! Looking forward to your feedback, Anne!
I forgot to update but just wanted to let you know that it worked really well with the venison. That might be useful for someone.
Great to hear that!