We always do a Greek-Based family lunch for Easter. It includes amazingly tasty favorites like Roasted Lamb with Egg and Lemon Sauce and Spanakopetas:
If you want our family recipe for these delicious Greek Treats, it can be found here.
Anyway, Mom was making the Lamb, Spanakopetas, and Strawberry Pie for the big day, and I was supposed to make two sides. I decided that I wanted to make Squash Casserole,
and then wanted to make something a little more Greek for the second side. My Grandmother used to roast her Lamb with baby potatoes, and they were always magically delicious, despite the fact that she used the canned potatoes out of those institution-sized un-branded cans.
So I decided to try and recreate her dish, without the cooking meat to flavor my potatoes and with, um, real potatoes.
Which, I suppose, makes it nothing like her recipe. But you sometimes have to use the tools given to you…
So I present a brand newly created recipe, shared exclusively with you,
Potato Avgolemono.
Avgolemono is the Greek word for “Egg and Lemon”, or “Egg and Lemon Sauce” or “I just ran over an Elephant.” I can’t say for sure what it means since I don’t remember anything from Greek School (except a searing memory of that kid that sat next to me with the unbelievable amount of black earwax that was always oozing out of his ears), but I’ve always been told it meant “Egg and Lemon Sauce”, so we’ll go with that.
When my family roasts lamb, the finishing touch is for it to be coated with an Egg and Lemon sauce. Also, Egg and Lemon sauce is the topper for “Greek Soup” (recipe of which can also be found on my massive recipe post). So, in my attempt to make my Potatoes Greek-y and reminiscent to tasting like the lamb I wasn’t making, I used Egg and Lemon Sauce.
Hence the name.
Anyway. The recipe.
What you’ll need:
3 pounds of baby red potatoes, the smaller the better.
A lotta butter. (1 stick)
4 eggs
4 lemons
1 Cup warm Beef or Pork broth, or, if you have any lying around perchance, lamb broth.
Wash the potatoes, then peel the middle for soaking up the flavors. Boil the potatoes in water and a stick of butter.
After boiling to edible softness, place potatoes (without the liquid) into a 13 x 9 glass casserole dish.
(If you’re not serving immediately, stop the recipe at this point and refrigerate until serving time.)
Heat the oven to 300 degrees. Rewarm potatoes, if you refrigerated.
Make Egg and Lemon Sauce:
Juice your lemons, remove seeds. Set aside.
Separate your eggs, and put the whites in a bowl (save the yolks). Beat the whites until they have soft peaks (i,e, – until you pull your beaters out and it creates peaks that fall over).
Slowly mix in yellows.
Mix warm broth and lemon juice together, then slowly mix into egg mixture.
Pour over potatoes, then put your dish in the oven until egg and lemon sauce looks slightly puffy (as shown in picture). Serve immediately, pouring the liquid over your potatoes.
These potatoes are especially good if served with Greek-Roasted Lamb, which I have absolutely no idea how to make. If only we’d learned that in Greek School…I probably would have still only remembered Earwax Kid.
Looks delicious! Experimenting in the kitchen is so much fun…well, at least when the food turns out good!
That squash casserole looks excellent too, I'd like that recipe!
Oh…I love those spinach things! I'll have to give it a try, instead of buying the frozen stuff. I'm hungry now.
Oh my gosh…I can't believe you mentioned black, oozing earwax in a recipe post! Eeewww! But, the potatoes do look yummy. :)
Looks yummy and I love Greek food. I will have to try it.
okay…I agree with Gina-TMI about you know what! gross!!!
Anyway, the potatoes do look good!
If I didn't include something like oozing black ear wax in a recipe post, it just wouldn't be me!! :)
I never realized that lemons are such a big part of Greek cusine. I'm not a big fan of lemons but the potatoes look good…so does the stuff at the top.
How many years did you go to Greek school? Is it in place of regular school or in addition to?
I'll be blogging about 'roast' soon but being a man, there will be NO recipes…just opinions from my roomies back in college (and myself) on how you're supposed to cook one. But as usual, the post will have nothing to do with the title, which was going to be 'Roast Blog', but I'm thinking about changing it to 'Put Another Blog On The Fire'. What part of Alabama are you from? None of those dishes would ever make an Okie table…not many Redneck Greeks around here although my mother-in-law's 'ham logs' look at little scary. I'm thinking there might be a blog subject there.
Randy (aka: Gee Whitz)
Right in the middle of all the delicious food talk you got to talk about the kid with earwax? YUK! YUK! and Double YUK! Personally I wish you would make me a whole bowl of the spano……youknow.
R – I went for a few years when I was young – not it wasn't in place of school, and I just went for the language part (the rest did all sorts of Greek Stuff).
Randy – I'm from Birmingham!