Lamb gyro is a Greek dish, cooked and served like shawarma or donair. Gyro is traditionally cooked on a vertical spit, but this recipe miniaturizes it into individual portions, which are cooked on bamboo skewers. The gyro skewers are served with rice, salad and a wedge of lemon. The lamb gyro bowl makes a perfect lunch or light dinner. If you'd like to make your own, check out the recipe below.
The lamb gyro ingredients are ground lamb, garlic, black pepper, cayenne, onion powder, oregano, and kosher salt. Put all the ingredients in a bowl and mix well.
To cook the gyros in the oven, line a broiler pan with foil, then put the broiler rack in place. If you don't have a broiler pan, a sheet pan and a stainless steel cooling rack will work just as well. If you'd prefer, you can grill the gyros, but make sure to soak the skewers in water for at least an hour before skewering the meat. This will help prevent them from catching fire on the grill.
Divide the meat in half, then split those two halves into three. Take one of the pieces of meat and squeeze it around a 12-inch bamboo skewer. Leave an inch or two of the skewer uncovered to use as a handle once the lamb is cooked. Put the lamb in a 400°f oven for 10 minutes, flip and cook for 5 more minutes.
Tip: Wear gloves or wet your hands with cold water while forming the meat around the skewers, so the meat doesn't stick to you.
The sauce for the salad is a very loose garlic aioli. When you see aioli on a menu at a restaurant, it is most often just flavoured mayonnaise. A true aioli is made with only garlic and oil. The garlic and oil are emulsified to create a mayonnaise-like texture. When making a large batch of aioli, like a cup or more, a food processor works really well. You purée the garlic, then slowly drizzle in the oil while the blade spins around. Really though, you do not need to make that much, and it isn't something you want to keep around for very long.
You can make aioli in a mortar and pestle, as I demonstrate in the pictures below. To do so, put three cloves of garlic in the mortar with a half teaspoon of kosher salt and mash it into a pulp with the pestle. Mix in three tablespoons of oil. As I said, this is a loose aioli. It is meant to be a dressing rather than a spread, but you will see how creamy it gets as you make it. If you don't have a mortar and pestle, purée the garlic as I demonstrate in this video, then whisk it with the oil in a small mixing bowl.
The salad combines halved grape tomatoes, sliced dill pickle, thinly sliced red onion, chopped parsley, and aioli. Put all the ingredients in a bowl and mix well, then season with salt and pepper to taste. Cucumber and green bell pepper make good additions to the salad.
To assemble the bowl, start with a half cup of cooked basmati rice, topped with a quarter cup of sliced iceberg lettuce, half the salad, a lamb gyro skewer, and finally, a wedge of lemon to squeeze over the bowl before eating.
I'm really happy with how these lamb gyro bowls came out, and I think you will love them. If you don't like lamb, that's not a problem because you can switch it out for beef or bison if you'd prefer.
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