Slow Cooked Lamb Bolognese
Paccheri Pasta, Homemade Ricotta
FA and I had the pleasure of attending a class offered at the Chefs’ Summer Cooking Series @ Terranea Resort where we were invited in to the Mar’ Sel restaurant kitchen for a step-by-step lamb butchering demonstration by the talented and engaging Chef Michael Fiorelli. After the lesson we, along with 8 other guests, were seated in the beautiful dining room overlooking the Pacific Ocean to feast on a fabulous luncheon highlighting lamb.
A Lesson in Butchery and Cooking

Chef Michael Fiorelli starts with a premium Lamb Carcass – the head, feet, skin and viscera have been removed.
Butchering Tips:
- Tools: Boning Knife and Steel, Saw, Cleaver, Mallet
- Knives must be very sharp
- Cut the meat with a knife, not cleaver or saw
- Cut the bones with cleaver and/or saw
- Use a rubber mallet to hit the cleaver to help drive it through the bone
- Buy a hacksaw from hardware store, no need to spend extra
- Let the knife do the work, following the bones
- Place damp towels under cutting board to help keep it steady
- Blue inspection stamps on raw meat are of food-grade vegetable dye and need not be removed
- Use all parts of the carcass either as meat, ground for sausage, or for stock: Shoulder, Neck, Shank, Rack, Breast, Loin, Leg, Trimmings and Bones
After-the-Lesson
Lamb Luncheon @ Mar’ Sel
✿✿✿
Housemade English Muffins
Tomato Basil Salad
Grilled Lamb Loin
with Farro, Wild Arugula, Crushed Olives, Preserved Lemon, Feta
Slow Cooked Lamb Bolognese
with Paccheri Pasta, Homemade Ricotta, Basil Garnish
Caramel & Chocolate Pudding, Cacao Nibs, Maldon Salt
✿✿✿✿✿
Graham Beck Brut Rosé NV Western Cape, South Africa
Hanzell Sebella Chardonnay 2010 Sonoma Valley, California
John Duval Plexus Shiraz/Grenache/Mourvedre 2009 Barrosa Valley, Australia





Chef Michael Fiorelli’s Slow Cooked Lamb Bolognese Recipe
- 2 lbs. lamb shoulder, trimmed and diced
- 1 small white onion
- 1 medium carrot, peeled
- 1 stalk celery
- 4 cloves garlic
- 1 pint mushrooms
- 1 c. tomato paste (or one small can)
- 2 c. red wine
- 1/2 c. parsley, chopped
- 28 oz. can plum tomatoes in juice
- 4 oz. unsalted butter
- 3/4 c. parmesan cheese, grated
- salt & pepper
- chile flakes
Rough chop carrot, onion, celery, and mushroom. Pulse in a food processor until coarsely ground. Brown meat in a large heavy bottomed roasting pan. With a slotted spoon, remove meat from pan then add vegetables. Sauté until cooked through. Add tomato paste and cook for approximately 5 minutes over low heat until paste begins to darken but be careful not to burn. Add wine and reduce to 1/4 cup or until almost dry. Add meat back to pan and add canned tomatoes. Simmer on low until lamb is tender and falling apart, about 4 hours. Add parsley and butter and parmesan. Season with salt, pepper, and chile flakes. Serve over paccheri pasta. Top with fresh ricotta and basil leaves.

A delicious & informative afteroon…Thanks so much, Chef!
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I really enjoyed meeting you guys at the class! You captured the day so beautifully. I love your blog and the photography is gorgeous. I want you to teach me how to take pictures like that! Thanks for sharing this in such detail for everyone to enjoy. Looking forward to seeing you at the next event. xo
Thanks Diana – it was great to meet you too! Thank you for your kind words. See you at the next event 🙂
LL
P.S. The mar’ sel garden is amazing! Kudos to you…
Now that is a glorious day! Such amazing photos – made me feel like I was there. Now pass me a plate (I’ll have a little of everything)!
Butchering that lamb looks pretty intimidating, but the results are worth it – especially when you put them to work in that glorious lamb bolognese. Glad you received the chitarra and I hope you post a recipe on your blog with you efforts.
What an utterly amazing menu–I really want those English muffins, along with the lamb bolognese. And I need as much butchery advice as I can get.
You have been blessed to have so many awesome experiences. How cool was this one!