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38 responses to “Lamb Butchering: Free the Meat!”

  1. Meredith

    I went to a pig butchering demo yesterday that was great, but yours looks so much more hands-on. It was very educational, but we didn’t get to cut anything. Also, lamb is my favorite meat :)

  2. Cheryl

    This sounds like a very fun time (especially all the great opportunities for good jokes)!

    I’m new to the whole notion of butchering, but I find your posts about it fascinating. Thanks for sharing your insight.

    With luck, maybe I can find a similar demonstration down here in L.A. I hadn’t thought to look until today. :)

  3. Laura

    T-shirt yes.
    Will non-food-bloggers be able to attend sometime?

  4. Anne

    Thanks for hosting Hank! Absolutely loved it and have to say that when I saw two deer while hiking in Marin yesterday, I thought to myself, how would I hunt and butcher that animal? The lamb feast in SF turned out great as well with tons of tenderloin and lamb belly. Thanks for the tip on the butter/wine/herb glaze sauce.

  5. Sarah

    Sounds amazing! I definitely think you should do the t-shirt. Put me down for a pre-ordered medium for my man:)

  6. kirsten

    Free the Meat! Great T-shirt, love the post!

  7. Karen

    Sounds educational but also fun… the best way to learn!

  8. Phillip

    Nice work, Hank!

    Ready to do one in the field?

  9. Matt Ames

    I would certainly wear on of your T-shirts, Hank. However, the slogan that comes to mind is the one I used to jokingly use years ago when I worked as a butcher. “Meat-Man by day…. Meat-Master by night”.

  10. Laura

    We have a local supermarket that has a t-shirt with a cow-meat-parts diagram and the slogan “No one beats our meat”. So YES to the t-shirts!

  11. Biggie

    I would *so* buy that shirt, but would it be dirty enough? ;-) Gotta make it more suggestive than “Lunch in a Box”.

    Seriously, thanks to both of you for a great afternoon of Goodfellas-style butchering. Fun to use a saw on bone for the first time, and to finally learn from you how to break down a ruminant like we’ve been threatening for over a year now! For tonight I’m currently pondering how to cook the lamb loin I brought home — hubby’s excited to grill the ribs on his Big Green Egg later this week. Bulgur pilaf made with homemade lamb stock is also beckoning… Lamb-tastic!

  12. matt

    man, sad you don’t live closer mate. I would have loved to have been in this class! I hope you do more of them, and give me some advanced notice about it!

  13. Katie

    My sister and I would love to attend a class if you offer another one. She’s a food science student at Davis and is considering becoming a butcher.

  14. Tina

    I would love to attend a class like this! Any chance of coming to PA to teach? It’s not really all that far…I had an uncle who was a butcher in New Jersey; he worked until he was 85 and right up till the end he could break down a carcass faster than I would have ever thought possible. I really regret not having the chance to learn from him.

  15. Nina

    Here, further north than you, all I know are female butchers. They are a feisty lot and share their information readily! I wish I had a freezer!
    Thanks Hank and Holly!

  16. Sharon Scott

    Thanks for posting this Hank.

  17. Restaurant Supplies Guy

    Just ignoring the fact that you carved up a lamb in your living room.. Its almost more amazing that you all have such a community of food bloggers that you can invite so many people over to participate and help. Very cool..

  18. Biggie

    That works for me! Now as for the illustration…

  19. Andrea

    Having only broken down chickens and turkeys, I would love to attend one of your classes here in Sacramento. Please give us lots of advance warning, though, so I can plan on it.

    I won’t be buying any T shirts but I can appreciate the humor. :)

  20. Nina

    I’m 25 miles south of Eureka, CA.

  21. Joshua

    Okay, when I stopped by, nothing seemed out-of-the-ordinary, and I didn’t even consider that until you wrote that it is, typically, strange to take apart an animal in one’s living room. I wouldn’t do it in mine, but there was nothing strange about it going on in yours.

  22. Melly

    Put me on your list for the next butchering workshop!!!! Sounds fantastic!

  23. r. hurd

    Very cool. I am getting some lamb and goat this summer and don’t know much about it. I will be checking back often for tips.

  24. kitchen table

    This is a very hands-on demo! I wish I can attend something like that. It will be very helpful to me.

  25. Derrick

    Squid story!

  26. Ken albala

    Boy does that sound like fun! And how did you manage to invite such an array of beautiful women?

    Look, where did you get the lamb is the question. And cost? Anything esle special about it?

  27. Carrie Oliver

    Hank, it’s interesting with regard to meat and women. A lot of the pioneering artisan meat folks I’ve met in the past 5 years have been women, including three lady butchers in the past two weeks. BTW, two questions: what kind of lamb was that and how did it taste?

  28. Stephanie - Wasabimon

    “Butchers, to your mind’s eye, are burly, mustachioed men quick with a knife and even quicker with a randy joke about their meat.”

    Heh, I think we held our own when it came to randy jokes about meat. ;)

    Thanks again, I had a great time. And I sent Garrett home with a neck for you!

  29. Heather in SF @HeatherHAL

    Thanks, Hank, for such a fun and instructive day, and the bag-o-meat to take home was just the best. I’m planning on braising the neck next weekend. Mmmm! It was great to meet you and Holly in person. And, yes, I do want a tee shirt!

  30. Roya

    I’d love to get in on the butchering demo if possible. I muddle through butchering and think learning from you would be amazing!

  31. Lamb and Barley Stew | Nose To Tail At Home

    [...] Shaw recently held a class on butchering lamb that my friend Luna Raven attended.  It’s a great read, I wish I had been able to make it [...]

  32. Carrie Oliver

    Hank, thanks! Manny’s name keeps coming up in conversations (in a good way). I also appreciate your lesson the other day re: differences in growing protocols between lamb from California and Colorado. A handful of calls to producers in my area suggests many (most?) are finishing on grain in order to get to market faster (3 months vs. 7 months) and offer year-round availability.

  33. Leftover yogurt? Make cheese!

    [...] had Labneh rolled in sumac and thyme a at Hank Shaw’s Lamb Butchering Demo few weekends ago, and it was freakin’ great. So great, in fact, that I had to try making it [...]

  34. Spring Forward with a Lamb CSA | Heather in SF

    [...] versatility, especially after learning how to refine my butchering skills with the session I had with Hank Shaw last Spring.  If I had a larger freezer I would most certainly buy my own whole lamb and butcher it.  It is [...]

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