Afelia’s Lamb Kebabs are really simple to make, they don’t require a great deal of effort but taste brilliant!
I always admired the way my mum used to make Lamb Kebabs using simple fresh ingredients, the results were lip-smackingly good. Shami kebabs were frequently present at our dining table growing up, my dad was a very keen kebab fan and loved a good kebab as a starter to his meal. They’re so versatile and best of all can be made ahead of time, so you can stock your freezer up and know whenever guests call, you have something yummy already prepared.
My mum always shaped the kebabs as small round tikkis/patties; this is how they are traditionally shaped in the Indian sub continent and are known as Shami Kebabs, if you mould them along a skewer using your hands they are called Sheekh Kebabs. This recipe is my own take on what my mum used to make all those years ago and I have added ingredients I think enhance the natural taste of the lamb. My husband, boys and daughter adore these kebabs and will have them at any given time; they are brilliant as a snack, as a starter when entertaining, packed in a lunch box or at Iftar time (this is when Muslims break their fast at sunset, during the holy month of Ramadan). I have a separate Chicken Kebab recipe if you’d liked to try that instead.
Using a mini chopper or food processor to turn the ingredients to a pulp is the key to a well formed kebab that holds together and by adding fresh breadcrumbs you ensure the kebabs are firm when moulded. For those of you who don’t own a mini chopper and are chopping by hand, ensure you chop your ingredients as finely as possible, you may also need to add an egg/chickpea flour to help bind the ingredients together, otherwise the kebabs may fall apart.
I used to add dry spices (coriander powder, cumin powder, etc, etc…) to my kebabs, but I honestly find this is a waste as lamb is naturally very tasty and in my opinion it doesn’t enhance the taste by much, over the years I have learnt to do many things differently. I know some people will be wondering why I add celery to my recipe, honestly just do it, it adds so much flavour. If you wanted to vary this recipe try adding some bell peppers, tomato paste or even scotch bonnet peppers to the mixture. I would also recommend a handful of fresh mint, this gives a wonderful aroma and is very complimentary to the lamb. Many of my friends and their families have tasted and tested this recipe and given it a big thumbs up, I hope you will too!
Makes approximately 40 – 45 kebabs
You will need: forΒ Afelia’s Lamb Kebabs
1.5 kg lamb mince
2 medium onions peeled
4 – 5 large green chillies (this is a mild kebab, adjust for a spicier kebab)
2 stalks of celery
1/2Β a bunch of coriander
1 tbsp minced ginger
1 tbsp minced garlic
1 thick slice of bread (equivalent to 1 cup fresh breadcrumbs)
1 level tbsp salt (or to your taste)
Method:
I don’t wash my mince and would recommend you don’t wash it either as washing removes fat and flavour and is an unnecessary step. Ask your butcher to wash the meat prior to mincing if it bothers you.
Tear the slice of bread by hand and place in your mini chopper/food processor…
….blitzΒ until fine. Place the fresh breadcrumbs in a large mixing bowl and leave to one side.
To make chopping the ingredients in the mini chopper easier, chop the 2 onions into quarters, roughly chop the coriander (this stops the coriander spinning around the centre of the chopper)….
….and roughly chop the 2 stalks of celery. Place the ingredients into the mini chopper (in batches if your food processor is small like mine) and blitz until very fine, I started with the 2 onions, 5 chillies and half of the coriander. Blitz to a fine pulp, DON’T add any water!
Next I blitzed the 2 stalks of celery and the remaining coriander.
Add all the blitzed ingredients to the bowl with the breadcrumbs and add 1 tbsp of ginger and 1 tbsp of garlic.
Next add the lamb mince, followed by 1 level tbsp of salt. Mix well by hand and ensure the pulped ingredients combine with the mince.
Kebabs have a tendency to reduce in size after being cooked which is why it’s important to mould them largely to start off with. I take a large portion of mincemeat and use the base of my palm as a measure of how large each kebab should be. At this point it is always a wise idea to test a small kebab for seasoning; pan fry, grill or air fry a small kebab and taste, adjust if necessary.
Carry on moulding them and place them on a plastic chopping board or flat surface to freeze. I find these flexible boards extremely useful as the kebabs don’t stick to the boards and release with ease after being frozen.
As an alternative to the Shami Kebab shape, you can also mould these as Kebab Pops (my daughter invented this name). Β Soak some cocktail sticks in some water, this prevents the sticks burning when the Kebab Pops are baked in the oven/airfryer.Β Take a small amount of mincemeat and shape into an oval shaped ball, then place a cocktail stick into the ball. Place the Kebab Pops on a flat surface and freeze.
When you want to cook the Shami Kebabs you can cook them from frozen, pan fry them for about 10 mins either side or oven bake them for 30 – 40 mins (depending on how brown you want them). Use a good quality non stick pan to prevent the kebabs sticking and turn over once you have a nice brown colour. Serve this with a delicious Greek Tzatziki sauce. It’s a delicious cooling Greek yoghurt and cucumber sauce that goes perfectly with these kebabs and makes a nice change to the usual ketchup we serve with most snacks.
Bon Appetit!!
- 1.5 kg lamb mince
- 2 medium onions peeled
- 4 - 5 large green chillies (this is a mild kebab, adjust for a spicier kebab)
- 2 stalks of celery
- ½ a bunch of coriander
- 1 tbsp minced ginger
- 1 tbsp minced garlic
- 1 thick slice of bread (equivalent to 1 cup fresh breadcrumbs)
- 1 level tbsp salt (or to your taste)
- I don't wash my mince and would recommend you don't wash it either as washing removes fat and flavour and is an unnecessary step. Ask your butcher to wash the meat prior to mincing if it bothers you.
- Tear the slice of bread by hand and place in your mini chopper/food processor...
- blitz until fine. Place the fresh breadcrumbs in a large mixing bowl and leave to one side.
- To make chopping the ingredients in the mini chopper easier, chop the 2 onions into quarters, roughly chop the coriander (this stops the coriander spinning around the centre of the chopper)....
- and roughly chop the 2 stalks of celery. Place the ingredients into the mini chopper (in batches if your food processor is small like mine) and blitz until very fine, I started with the 2 onions, 5 chillies and half of the coriander. Blitz to a fine pulp, DON'T add any water!
- Next I blitzed the 2 stalks of celery and the remaining coriander.
- Add all the blitzed ingredients to the bowl with the breadcrumbs and add 1 tbsp of ginger and 1 tbsp of garlic.
- Next add the lamb mince, followed by 1 level tbsp of salt. Mix well by hand and ensure the pulped ingredients combine with the mince.
- Kebabs have a tendency to reduce in size after being cooked which is why it's important to mould them largely to start off with. I take a large portion of mincemeat and use the base of my palm as a measure of how large each kebab should be. At this point it is always a wise idea to test a small kebab for seasoning; pan fry, grill or air fry a small kebab and taste, adjust if necessary.
- Carry on moulding them and place them on a plastic chopping board or flat surface to freeze. I find these flexible boards extremely useful as the kebabs don't stick to the boards and release with ease after being frozen.
- As an alternative to the Shami Kebab shape, you can also mould these as Kebab Pops (my daughter invented this name). Soak some cocktail sticks in some water, this prevents the sticks burning when the Kebab Pops are baked in the oven/airfryer. Take a small amount of mincemeat and shape into an oval shaped ball, then place a cocktail stick into the ball. Place the Kebab Pops on a flat surface and freeze.
- When you want to cook the Shami Kebabs you can cook them from frozen, pan fry them for about 10 mins either side or oven bake them for 30 - 40 mins (depending on how brown you want them). Use a good quality non stick pan to prevent the kebabs sticking and turn over once you have a nice brown colour. Serve this with a delicious Greek Tzatziki sauce. It's a delicious cooling Greek yoghurt and cucumber sauce that goes perfectly with these kebabs and makes a nice change to the usual ketchup we serve with most snacks.
If you like the recipe please share with friends and family, alsoΒ follow me onΒ FacebookΒ and Instagram.Β Questions? Leave a comment below or message me on Facebook.
Β
Soniya
Salam sister, I want to make sure before I make a start; when frying the kebabs do
You add any oil ? I wasnβt sure
Thank you for your lovely recipes and greatest efforts bless you
afelia’s kitchen
Wa alaikum as salaam….Yes I add a small amount of oil to the pan before frying the kebabs.
Helan
Thanks For Sharing this Amazing Recipe. My Family Loved It. I will be sharing this Recipe with my Friends. Hope They will like it.
afelia’s kitchen
You’re most welcome, I’m so happy you enjoyed the recipe! x
Zarina
Hi,
The celery in this recipe is a game changer! Thank you! π
afelia’s kitchen
Glad you enjoyed the recipe and thanks for the feedback! π
Shazia
Hi thank you so much for your recipes I ve been looking at them all day like a kid in a candy shop lol. I would like to try your kebab pops and wanted to ask what’s the best way to cook them once out of the freezer. Thanks xx
afelia’s kitchen
Oven bake, grill (rotate them whilst grilling) or airfry them in an airfryer.
Nadia
So do u add no additional oil?
afelia’s kitchen
That’s right.
Emily
Hi Afelia.
Thank you so much for this recipe. Just a quick question, probably a silly one too, can these be cooked fresh without freezing them?
Hope you are keeping safe
Emily
afelia’s kitchen
Yes of course. x
Raaz
These were amazing. The best iv had
afelia’s kitchen
Brilliant, glad you enjoyed it. π
MARYAM UMM
Sis for freezing would you cook them and freeze and jist heat it before servinh them.or freeze before cooking?
JazakAllah
afelia’s kitchen
Freeze before cooking like the recipe states.
Tisha Reza
I’ve just made this mixture and put it in the fridge for tomorrow. Not without frying a tester ofcourse! These are so good!! I always thought you have to drown kebabs in powder spices but these are just amazing without!! Thank you so much for the recipe!
Nashe
Salaam. You’re recipes are amazing mashaAllah. One quick question, i know it might sound silly. If you make this into sheesh kebabs, did you pan fry them or used the oven? Thank you
afelia’s kitchen
Grill them, don’t oven bake as they will dry out, restaurants never bake kebabs for this reason! x
Salima
Hi sis
Can I use gram flour instead of breadcrumbs? Mom used to use gram flour, which is better?x
afelia’s kitchen
Wa alaikum as salaam……I grilled them. π
Anisa Abdul Rahim
JazakAllah Khair my sister I just your stories and I have bought some Lamb mince which I will make tonight for iftar. May Allah reward you abundantly. Xx
afelia’s kitchen
Ameen. x
Shumii
Salaam sis
How long would you cook these in a air fryer and how many would you suggest to cook at a time.
In shaa Allah Will try this for my family iftar this week.
Please do let me know.
afelia’s kitchen
Wa alaikum as salaam…….these would be better cooked in a pan or under the grill, the airfryer may dry them out and the machine will smoke during cooking from the dripping fat.
Hana
Salam, thank you for sharing such a lovely recipe. I’ve frozen them and was about to bake some now but realised you don’t say at what temperature and whether I should cover them in foil? Please advise. Thank you!
afelia’s kitchen
I would cook them at 190Β°C and cook them uncovered. Hope this helps.
Nas
It was yummy.. I followed the recipe step by step and it turned out so well and hit for my family. Thank you affa π
afelia’s kitchen
I’m so pleased everyone enjoyed it, you’re most welcome. x
Maleha
hi! what if i only have beef? what spices can I add into the marinade?
afelia’s kitchen
Follow the recipe as it is if you’re using beef.
Shelema
So tasty. I have made this in bulk so many times and store in the freezer for the kids snacks or to serve to guests. Really tasty recipe.
afelia’s kitchen
This is a really great food to stock up on, so glad you like the recipe. x
Maya
Hi Afelia,
I just made these and put them in the freezer, I canβt wait to try them! I have a question- I realized growing up my mom always put eggs in her kebabs I guess to act a glue- just curious if that is true as I donβt want them falling apart!
afelia’s kitchen
Hi Maya, as long as you’ve blitzed the onions and other ingredients in a food processor till fine, the kebabs will be fine and won’t fall apart. My mum used to add egg too but because she used to chop everything by hand the egg was needed. My kebabs have never fallen apart and I cook them straight from frozen. x
Maya
Ok! Thank you! That makes sense as my mom just chopped them up too and did not use food processor!
Maya
My first time making kebabs and it was a hit!! Even from my mom whose a tough critic! Thank you so much!!
afelia’s kitchen
If it got mum’s approval then it must be alright! π Glad it went down well with everyone. x
ema
Hi Afelia.i was wondering if you can put the frozen kebabs straight into the air fryer?
thanks
afelia’s kitchen
I have never tried cooking them in the airfryer and would recommend cooking them on a solid base. x
Ruhena
I gave these kebabs a try and they were very tasty! Thank you so much for the recipe!
MK
I was so surprised with the outcome of these kebabs. I was so tempted to use spices but I did and I’m so glad I didn’t as these came out really tasty. Thank you for sharing the receipe
Rahima
Salam Sis. OMG! Thank you for this recipe! My Daughter is a picky eater, but when she ate all of these Kebabs on her plate and nicked her brothers I was over the moon. Lol.
Such a quick, easy and tasty recipe.
Runa
Hi afa..thank you for sharing your recipes..I love going through you recipes and recreating them. I am hoping to make these kebabs but everytime I have made kebabas previously they have broken apart whilst cooking. I have always used a George Foreman grill..and even BBQ but have had no luck. π Is there anything I should be doing to keep it together? Or if I follow your recipe step by step do you think it will come apart? Thanks!xx Runa
afelia’s kitchen
I don’t know if you’ve previously added breadcrumbs but I find that that helps bind the kebabs and absorb the excess moisture. I also find that of you chop the ingredients instead of finely processing like I have done, the kebabs fall apart because the ingredients aren’t fine enough. Let me know how you get on with this, I know others have had great success. xx
Hamida
Salam sis, just wanted to know, can you use the shop bought breadcrumbs or is it best to use the freshly made?
afelia’s kitchen
It’s best to use homemade breadcrumbs, I only use store bought breadcrumbs when I am planning on coating something. x
Ayesha
Assalamu alaikum
Tried these kebabs today and they were really nice!!
I didnt have celery but will defo try it again soon inshaAllah
Thanks Afia for sharing your recepies!!
Nahin
Salam,
I tried this today and Mash’Allah it very scrumptious! Also made the yougurt dip and it was the perfect combo! Thank you β€οΈβ€οΈβ€οΈ
Tahiyah Haque
Salaam afa jazaakAllah for this recipe is tried it at home and it was a hit. It’s perfect for my 10 month old as it’s not spicy at all.
afelia’s kitchen
Wa alaikum as salaam….that’s super, I like my food flavoursome, that doesn’t always mean spicy, so I’m glad your 10 month old enjoyed them too! xxx
Ayesha
Sorry meant 5 stars argh
Rahima
I made these kebabs for my husband who only really eats chicken, so I made minced chicken version of this lamb kebab. It was a massive hit, I was tempted to add spices when I read the ingredients but so glad I did not as it doesn’t need it.
I am making this again today ?.
Thank You Afia for your simple and easy recipe it really helps someone like me who hates cooking but has to now that I am all grown up. ?
afelia’s kitchen
You’re welcome, I’m so glad you enjoyed this recipe and resisted the urge to add ground spices, it really is full of flavour without! And lol, yes, we all have to grow up one day! π xx
Rih
I’m going to try these today! Was going to make them anyways but came here to double check if the ingredients were correct except I dont have celery π Thank you!
afelia’s kitchen
You’re welcome, I hope the kebabs were a huge success! Please try them with celery the next time you make them, it’s adds a huge amount of flavour to the kebabs. π x
Ruby
Looks delicious! Will definitely try it. Can you also post your lamb sheek kebabs please!
afelia’s kitchen
Thanks, let me know how it goes….and yes, I will post a recipe for the sheek kebabs soon! π xx
Lina
I tried this recipe a few days ago and despite the lack of ground spices they turned out really tasty! I didn’t blitz the onion or celery just very very finely grated them. The celery definitely adds a lovely subtle flavour without overpowering an already flavoursome meat. Will definitely make these again! Thank you for the recipe Afelia!
afelia’s kitchen
Thanks Lina, it’s really wonderful that you enjoyed this recipe, it makes a nice change from everything that is overloaded in ground spices that’s for sure! π xx
Shabnam Mahmood
ASAK. Very nice recipe. Question, what’s the difference in using fresh bread crumbs versus store bought ones? JZK
afelia’s kitchen
WS…you’re welcome. The store bought ones are much harder and may not combine as easily as fresh breadcrumbs do, they absorb the moisture from ingredients very easily. I’ve never used them but you are welcome to give it a try and let me know the outcome. π
Salima
Hi sis
Can I use gram flour instead of breadcrumbs? As my mom used to use gram flour, is bread crumb better for combing the mixture?x
afelia’s kitchen
Yes you may use gram flour, breadcrumbs just helps to hold the shape of the kebabs a little better. x