How is the lamb meat made in lamb gyros?
I've been to several Middle Eastern inspired restaurants around where I live and in most of these restaurants, the customers are able to see into the kitchen as they prep our food. In the middle of the kitchen I normally see something like this:
I asked the waitress what they were and she told us that the "blob" on the right is lamb. My friend then went ahead and order a lamb gyro platter. We watched as they carved thin slices off of the lamb. These slices look something like this:
My friend let me try a piece of the "lamb" meat but it didn't really taste like meat. It was tasty but the texture seemed too "smooth" to taste like meat. The texture almost reminded me of vegan meat substitute. Its texture was nothing like what ground beef felt like. How did they prepare the lamb that they got such a texture? And is this authentic or just an American bastardization of the authentic gyro meats?
Best Answer
For the times I've done gyros as such, you basically make a 'paste' out of it in the food processor.
Throw ground lamb in and give it a whirl, mix your spices and such in, put it on a spit, fridge to give a bit hard, and then on the spit. It comes out with a texture like that. That's how that kind is often done.
For 'proper' tasting meat (more like the one on the left), its alternating layers of razor thin meat and fat.
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Quick Answer about "How is the lamb meat made in lamb gyros?"
Traditionally gyro meatWhat is lamb gyro meat made from?
It's classically made from lamb, a combo of lamb and beef, or even chicken, is very generously seasoned with salt, herbs and spices, and is nothing sort of an impossible-not-to-love flavor explosion.How is the gyro meat made?
Typical American mass-produced gyros are made with finely ground beef mixed with lamb. For hand-made gyros, meat is cut into approximately round, thin, flat slices, which are then stacked on a spit and seasoned. Fat trimmings are usually interspersed. Spices may include cumin, oregano, thyme, rosemary, and others.What part of lamb is in gyros?
Roasted Leg of Lamb (Gyros)Is gyro meat pure lamb?
Unlike Greek gyros, which are usually made with whole pieces of thinly-sliced marinated pork skewered in a large stack on the rotisserie before being cooked and shaved, Greek-American gyros are made with a large, sausage-like cone of seasoned minced lamb and beef.HOW TO MAKE LAMB YIROS | @The Real Greek Chef
More answers regarding how is the lamb meat made in lamb gyros?
Answer 2
Being Greek I don't paticularly like this kind of lamb. It's really a compressed meat loaf if you ask me. But you can watch Alton Brown make this version on Good Eats
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MabT40VRvZk
In your first photo I prefer when the meats are stacked up like on the left side. You can also use ground beef, lamb, chicken or pork season them and shape them into hot dogs. These are popular alternatives in Greece to a typical Gyro.
Answer 3
In answer to "And is this authentic or just an American bastardization of the authentic gyro meats?", it could be American bastardization, or just lazy cafe owners?
Shawarma is made by stacking strips of meat on the skewer. Like spokes on a bicycle wheel, where the skewer is the hub. One end of a strip goes on the skewer, the other hangs out
The meat is prepared by slicing it raw from the carcase into 10 to 20 cm long strips, about 1 cm thick. It is then rolled in dry-ish marinade of finely chopped/mashed onion, fresh chopped/mashed/ground cumin, salt, and other secret spices depending on who your mother was
The meat is layered onto the skewer (short bits at the bottom, long bits at the top if a vertical skewer). Strips of lamb fat are interlaced, or even patterned in depending on the skill of the butcher
A similar technique is used for chicken, beef etc
NO food processor is used, no exotic chemicals are used either!
As it roasts horizontally or vertically in front of a fire. The cooked bits are continuously carved off, and if not served immediately, put aside to cool. Cooled meat can be quickly re-heated in the grill or in a pan in the wood fired oven (which is used to make the breads)
To make this at home
Marinade some 1 cm thick slabs of lamb (chest flaps will do) with onions, cumin, salt etc., make sure there is some lmab fat on it. Grill (broil) fatty side up on medium-high, but do not turn. When underside is about done, and the top has not burnt, remove and let stand for a bit, then slice/dice thinly and serve as per a normal Shawarma
If you are visiting New Zealand, make sure you visit the best Shawarma house http://middleeastcafe.co.nz/
Answer 4
Very good article in the Guardian about this very topic, apparantly in industrial production they use transglutaminase but it's not required:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/wordofmouth/2012/feb/08/the-diy-doner-kebab
Answer 5
Contrary to how @rfusca has done it, I actually mix up all of the spices and liquids in my food processor, then combine the ground lamb by hand with the mixture. I agree with the original poster that it doesn't quite taste the same, and a lot of that has to do with how you actually cook it. If you aren't using a spit at home, you aren't going to have the same flavor or texture.
The way that I have been able to achieve a similar style to the restaurant bought versions is to make patties using a panade with the lamb, and pan fry the patties. They stay very moist due to the panade, and are easy to cook indoors in any house.
In my opinion, the at home version tastes better and is of higher quality than what you can get in most US restaurants. Typically the meat is very finely ground and pressed, usually comprising of very little lamb. The flavors of the at home versions are usually more preferable to me as well.
I will say, as a tip, I tried using veal as a substitute for ground lamb once, and I did not find it appealing. This may be obvious to others, but it was news to me.
If you look closely, you will find my gyro patties up on top.
Answer 6
Gyro meat blocks are essentially meat loaves - bread crumbs are a common ingredient, as are other things you'd find in a meatloaf recipe. Here's one creative person's approach to both a homemade gyro cooker and the meat block to cook on it.
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Karl Solano, Maria Bortolotto, Andrei Marina, Gil Goldman