Lamb & Pear Tagine
Submitted by brenna
Moroccan lamb and pear tagine slow-simmered with cumin, coriander, ginger, and cinnamon, finished with sweet pears, golden raisins, and slivered almonds. A traditional sweet-savory braise served over rice.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
2 hrsREADY
2 hrsTagines are Moroccan slow-cooked dishes that build complex flavor through patience and warm spice layering. This lamb tagine uses pears as the fruit element, a sweeter and gentler choice than the traditional apricots or prunes, with golden raisins (sultanas) and slivered almonds rounding out the classic Moroccan sweet-savory contrast.
The spice combination of cumin, coriander, ginger, and cinnamon is the foundation of countless North African dishes. Frying the onions soft first, then adding the spices to bloom in the oil before any liquid hits the pan is the technique that unlocks the volatile aromatics, the difference between flat and fragrant.
Lamb leg or shoulder is the right cut for a tagine. The connective tissue breaks down over the long simmer into silky gelatin that coats every bite, while leaner cuts go stringy and dry. The 90-minute to 2-hour cook is non-negotiable; pull early and the meat stays tough.
Adding the pears, raisins, and almonds only in the final 5 minutes preserves their structure. Pears added at the start would dissolve into mush; this late addition keeps them tender but distinct, swelling with the spiced juices without falling apart.
Chef Tips
- Use firm, slightly underripe pears (Bosc or Anjou work well). Soft ripe pears turn to mush even in the brief final cook.
- Toast the slivered almonds in a dry skillet for 3 to 4 minutes before adding. Toasted nuts contribute much more flavor than raw.
- A traditional tagine pot with conical lid traps and recirculates steam beautifully, but any heavy lidded Dutch oven works fine.
- This dish tastes even better on day 2 after the flavors marry overnight. Add the pears and almonds fresh when reheating.
Variations
- Substitute dried apricots, prunes, or quinces for pears for a more traditional Moroccan profile.
- Add a pinch of saffron to the simmer for a richer golden color and floral depth.
- Stir in 1 tablespoon of honey at the end for a sweeter, more dessert-like tagine.
Ingredients
Directions
Tagines are Moroccan slow-cooked meat, fruit and vegetable dishes which are almost invariably made with mutton.
Using lamb cuts down the cooking time, but if you can find good hogget (older than lamb, younger than mutton, commonly labelled “baking legs” and sold cheaply) that will do very well.
In a large saucepan gently fry the onion in the olive oil until soft, add the spices.
Add water to just cover the meat and salt to taste.
Cover and simmer gently until the meat is tender, about 1½ to 2 hours.
Add the pears to the meat together with the sultanas and almonds.
Cook for a further 5 minutes or until the pears are soft.
Serve with rice.
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