I first had mutton at Keene’s Steakhouse here in Manhattan and have been back multiple times to have it again. It’s better than your average steak. And better by a significant margin than nearly all lamb I’ve had, too.
I think Americans tend not to try foods they aren’t already familiar with. Me, I’d try crocodile, lemur, salamander, gila monster, fried crickets, etc, in a heartbeat whenever and wherever I find them, but judging from my friends and acquaintances that’s unusual, and most Americans learn a handful of foods and then don’t go beyond them. And mutton isn’t on the list. Might as well be roaches.
We ate it when I was really small, but I don’t think I’ve had it since I was old enough to connect the word lamb to the cute furry critter. I don’t recall particularly liking it way back when, and I’m in the “I don’t eat baby animals” (or game. or seafood) camp so I’ve never sought it out as an adult. I do know that the grocery stores around here have it, though.
I guess I could experiment with treatments I give beef and pork and chicken. Though combined with my first reason, and the fact that other meats are much more readily available in a greater variety of cuts, looking so good… it’s hard to pick up something iffy when you know a guaranteed hit is there.
I’d probably be more willing to test it if my SO was into it, but he’s on the same page as me. Plus his last attempt at shepherd’s pie with ground lamb turned out badly, so he’s not eager to relive the experience.
Ah well, that leaves more for the people who do like it.
That he is and true enough ;). Oddly enough my father is the better cook in the family compared to my mother or step-mother - wonder if his father cooked as well? His mother was a great cook, but his father died when I was a baby. Hmmm…I should ask.
Can’t say I liked most of those doughy East European pastries and breads he learned, but man did I love that poppyseed strudel.
Ohhh…dolmas.
I should never have opened this thread. Now I HAVE to do lamb this weekend. Maybe I’ll take a stab at that shepherd’s pie.