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Home Collections Winter Warmers

Slow Cooked Lamb Shanks in Red Wine Sauce

By Nagi Maehashi
1,139 Comments
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Published8 Aug '18 Updated30 Apr '25
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Lamb shanks are the king of all lamb cuts!! Slow cooked until meltingly tender in a  rich, deeply flavoured red wine sauce, this recipe is worthy of fine dining restaurants yet is completely straightforward to make. Serve it over creamy mashed potato with a side of peas or sautéed spinach, with crusty bread to mop your bowl clean!

* Here for the cookbook version? Find it here -> the elegant Restaurant Lamb Shanks in Red Wine Sauce.

Slow Cooked Lamb Shanks in Red Wine Sauce in a cast iron pot, fresh off the stove ready to be served

Slow Cooked Lamb Shanks

I have a real soft spot for slow cooked lamb shanks. I just love the look of a hunk of meltingly tender meat wrapped around the bone. Hits my carnivore sweet-spot, every time.

Honestly, if you put this and a towering frosted cake in front of me, this would win every day of the week and twice on Sunday:

Slow Cooked Lamb Shanks in Red Wine Sauce served on creamy mashed potato, ready to be eaten

Cooking lamb shanks is easy!

Being a tough cut of meat that needs slow cooking to make it fall-off-the-bone tender, lamb shanks are actually very forgiving so it’s a real easy cut to cook with.

You literally cannot overcook lamb shanks.Leave it in for an hour too long, and the meat is still succulent and juicy. The worst that will happen is that the meat falls off the bone when you go to serve it.

And if you pull it out too early and the meat isn’t fork tender, just add more liquid and keep cooking!

The only key tip I have is to brown that shank as well as you can. It is a hard shape to brown evenly, but do what you can. Browning is the key flavour base for any protein that’s slow cooked in a braising liquid, like Beef Stew, Pot Roast, Chicken Stew. If you ever see a slow cooked stew recipe that doesn’t call for browning the meat before slow cooking, proceed with caution!

Preparation steps for Slow Cooked Lamb Shanks in Red Wine Sauce

I love slow cooking meat on the bone. Lamb Shanks, Beef Short Ribs and Osso Buco – better flavour more succulent!

What are lamb shanks?

If you’re new to lamb shanks, here’s a rundown: lamb shanks are from the lower leg of lambs, and they are an inexpensive, tough cut of meat.

Because of this, lamb shanks need to be slow cooked – either braised or roasted – to break down the tough meat to soften into succulent tenderness.

The meat itself is full of flavour which adds to the flavour of the sauce.

BONUS: The marrow in the bone melts into the sauce, deepening the flavour and richness. We love freebies around here!!

Close up of Slow Cooked Lamb Shanks in Red Wine Sauce, showing how tender the meat is

Classic Red Wine Sauce for Lamb Shanks

Red wine sauce is a classic braising liquid for lamb shanks, with the rich deep flavours a natural pairing with the strong flavour of lamb.

The red wine sauce is super simple to make but after hours of slow cooking, it transforms into an incredible rich, deeply flavoured sauce that’s silky and glossy, and looks totally posh-restauranty.

Just a quick note on the wine – I do not use expensive wines for slow cooking. I truly believe from the bottom of my heart that even the snobbiest of all food snobs would not be able to tell the difference if you made this with a discount end-of-bin $5 bottle or a $50 bottle. (And the New York Times agrees….)

Maybe you could tell the difference using a $100 bottle. But that’s not within my budget….

Non alcoholic sub for wine?

The wine is a key flavour for the broth in this recipe. So if you cannot consume alcohol, it is best to substitute with non-alcoholic red wine.

Please do not use more beef or chicken stock/broth, even if it’s low sodium. This sauce has amazing flavour in it because it is massively concentrated down (essentially into a jus). So if you use more stock then it will end up too salty.

Overhead photo of Slow Cooked Lamb Shanks in Red Wine Sauce served over creamy mashed potato with a side of peas, ready to be eaten

This is one of those recipes that truly is terrific to make in the oven, stove, slow cooker or pressure cooker, as long as its started on the stove to brown the shanks and saute the onion etc. Right now, being winter here in Sydney, I choose the oven so it keeps my house nice and warm! – Nagi x


Slow cooked lamb shanks
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Slow Cooked Lamb Shanks in Red Wine Sauce served on creamy mashed potato, ready to be eaten

Lamb Shanks in Red Wine Sauce

Author: Nagi
Prep: 20 minutes mins
Cook: 3 hours hrs 30 minutes mins
Main
Western
4.95 from 342 votes
Servings4
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Recipe video above. A classic way to prepare shanks, these are slow cooked in a deeply flavoured red wine sauce until they are meltingly tender. You can't taste the red wine at the end, it completely transforms into a rich sauce. Make this in the oven, on your stove or even in a slow cooker – instructions provided for all!
Note: This is my original lamb shanks recipe. There is also a more involved Restaurant-style red wine lamb shanks version in my cookbook which is more "fine-dining" style and involves an overnight marinade. See Note 7 for more information! 

Ingredients

  • 4 lamb shanks , around 13 oz / 400g each (Note 1)
  • 1 tsp EACH cooking/kosher salt and pepper
  • 2 – 3 tbsp olive oil , separated
  • 1 onion , finely diced (brown, yellow or white)
  • 3 garlic cloves , minced
  • 1 cup carrot , peeled, finely diced (Note 2)
  • 1 cup celery , finely diced (Note 2)
  • 2 1/2 cups red wine (full bodied (good value wine, not expensive! Note 3)
  • 800 g / 28oz can crushed tomatoes
  • 2 tbsp tomato paste
  • 2 cups chicken stock , low sodium (or water)
  • 5 sprigs of thyme (preferably tied together), or 2 tsp dried thyme
  • 2 dried bay leaves (or 4 fresh)

To Serve:

  • Mashed potato , polenta or pureed cauliflower
  • Fresh thyme leaves , optional garnish
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 180°C/350°F (all oven types – fan and standard).
  • Season shanks – Pat the lamb shanks dry and sprinkle with salt and pepper.
  • Brown – Heat 2 tablespoons of olive oil in a large heavy based pot over high heat. Sear the lamb shanks in 2 batches until brown all over, about 5 minutes. Remove lamb onto a plate and drain excess fat (if any) from the pot.
  • Sauté aromatics – Turn the heat down to medium low. Heat remaining 1 tablespoon of olive oil in the same pot. Add the onion and garlic, cook for 2 minutes. Add carrot and celery. Cook for 5 minutes until onion is translucent and sweet.
  • Braising liquid – Add the red wine, chicken stock, crushed tomato, tomato paste, thyme and bay leaves. Stir to combine.
  • Add shanks – Place the lamb shanks into the pot, squeezing them in to fit so they are mostly submerged. (Note 1)
  • Oven 2 hours covered – Turn stove up, bring liquid to a simmer. Cover, then transfer to the oven for 2 hours (see notes for other cook methods).
  • Uncovered 30 minutes – Remove lid, then return to the oven for another 30 minutes (so 2 1/2 hours in total). Check to ensure lamb meat is ultra tender – if not, cover and keep cooking. Ideal is tender meat but still just holding onto bone.
  • Remove lamb onto plate and keep warm. Pick out and discard bay leaves and thyme.
  • Sauce – Strain the sauce into a bowl, pressing to extract all sauce out of the veggies (Note 5 for repurposing the veggies). Pour strained sauce back into pot. If needed, bring to a simmer over medium heat and reduce slightly to a syrupy consistency (see video) – I rarely need to. Taste then add salt and pepper to taste (Note 5 on sauce taste).
  • Serve the lamb shanks on mashed potato or cauliflower puree with plenty of sauce! Garnish with thyme leaves if desired.

Recipe Notes:

1. Lamb Shanks – sizes vary considerably so make sure you get ones that will fit in your cooking vessel! 4 x 400g/13oz lamb shanks fits snugly in a 26cm/11″ diameter Chasseur dutch oven which is what I use. They don’t need to be completely submerged, just as long as most of the meaty end is mostly submerged, that’s fine. If you don’t have a pot large enough, you can switch to a baking dish for the slow cooking part, and cover with a double layer of foil if you don’t have a lid for it. You can also ask your butcher to cut the shaft so it bends if you are concerned, or to trim it slightly.
Cook time – 350-400g shanks should cook to “fall apart tender” but still holding onto bone in 2.5 hrs at 180°C/350°F. It can take up to 3 hrs, so to err on the side of caution re: dinner timing, give yourself 3 hours oven time. Shanks are the sort of thing that can sit around for ages and stay warm (keep covered in pot) and the flavour just gets even better. In fact, if you are cooking to impress, cook it the day before then reheat to serve – flavour will develop overnight, like with any stew!
2. Onion, carrot and celery is the “holy trinity” of slow cooking, creating a beautiful flavour base for the sauce. It’s not a deal breaker to exclude the carrot and celery, but it does give the sauce an extra edge.
3. Wine – Use a good value full bodied red wine, like cabaret sauvignon or merlot. Shiraz is ok too. No need to use expensive wine for slow cooked recipes like this (and the New York Times agrees). Use discount end of bin specials (I get mine from Dan Murphey’s). Pinots not suitable, too light. 99% of the alcohol in the red wine evaporates during cooking. The sauce does not taste winey at all, it completely transforms.
Non alcoholic sub: 1 1/2 cups beef broth LOW SODIUM, 1 cup water. + 1 tbsp Worcestershire Sauce. Beef has a stronger deeper flavour than chicken so will be more suited to being the sub for wine.
4. Most of the alcohol in the red wine will evaporate during this step but not completely – it will finish evaporating during the slow cooking. The sauce does not taste winey at all, it completely transforms.
5. Sauce options: The other option is to blitz the sauce using a sick blender. The sauce will be thicker, and you’ll have more of it (leftovers great tossed through pasta). This is what I used to do, but nowadays I prefer to strain the sauce because I like how glossy and rich it is – this is how restaurants serve it. You could also skip straining or blitzing, it just means you get little veg lumps in the sauce. All are tasty options, it mainly comes down to visual.
TIP: If you strain the sauce, keep the veggies etc in the strainer to make a terrific sauce, they are loaded with flavour even though all juice is squeezed out of them. What I do is make a basic tomato sauce with garlic, onion, canned tomato and water. Then I blitz that with the veggies. Use it to make a killer pasta or lasagna!!
Sour sauce? Sounds like there might’ve been issues with your canned tomatoes (poor quality = overly sour, good quality = sweet). Add a touch of honey or sugar, simmer for few minutes. Also, you didn’t rush the carrots/celery sautéing step did you?? Cooking them for 5 minutes sweetens them! 🙂
6. OTHER COOK OPTIONS:
Slow cooker – Follow recipe to step 7. Bring sauce to simmer, scrape bottom of pot to get all brown bits into the liquid. Place shanks in slow cooker, add the sauce. Cook on low for 8 hours. Remove shanks, strain and reduce sauce to desired thickness on stove (if you blitz per Note 5, you won’t need to reduce).
Pressure Cooker – Follow Slow Cooker steps, cook for 40 minutes on high. Release pressure according to manufacturer directions. Stove – to cook this on the stove, cook for about 2 hours on low, ensuring that you check it at 1 hour then every 30 minutes thereafter to ensure there is enough braising liquid (because liquid evaporates faster on the stove) and the bottom of the pot isn’t catching. Turn the lamb shanks twice. You won’t get the brown crust, but the flavour is the same!
7. Original recipe vs cookbook version – The original lamb shanks recipe is from 2015 which was improved in 2018. There is also a very elegant red wine lamb shanks recipe in my cookbook which is an elegant fine-dining version.
Nutrition per serving. This is conservative – it doesn’t take into account fat trimmed from shanks or discarded fat. Also assumes all sauce is consumed which it probably won’t be.

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 624cal (31%)Carbohydrates: 31g (10%)Protein: 42g (84%)Fat: 25g (38%)Saturated Fat: 5g (31%)Polyunsaturated Fat: 3gMonounsaturated Fat: 16gCholesterol: 117mg (39%)Sodium: 1260mg (55%)Potassium: 1590mg (45%)Fiber: 6g (25%)Sugar: 16g (18%)Vitamin A: 6022IU (120%)Vitamin C: 26mg (32%)Calcium: 133mg (13%)Iron: 7mg (39%)
Keywords: Lamb Shanks, red wine sauce for lamb shanks
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

Originally published August 2015, updated with new photos, video and a slightly refined recipe in 2018. Previously the base recipe said to blitz the sauce at the end. It looks much posher (ie fine dining style) and actually does taste nicer just to strain it because the sauce stays glossy – if you blitz, sauce becomes more matte and is not as smooth. 🙂 Recipe then further improved when it was decided to include this lamb shanks in my debut cookbook Dinner – that “restaurant” version is exclusive to my cookbook!


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1,139 Comments

  1. Gord Abal says

    August 1, 2023 at 10:30 am

    I made this recipe and it was delicious! Next time, I’d like to try adding a combo of Persian or Moroccan seasonings.
    I have a ton of sauce left over which I’ve now frozen. Any suggestions on how to use?

    Reply
    • Sharon says

      October 7, 2023 at 8:31 am

      5 stars
      Try using the sauce on pasta.

      Reply
  2. Sky says

    July 26, 2023 at 11:45 am

    Can you please advise how to reheat if made the day before?

    Reply
  3. Kym says

    July 14, 2023 at 7:41 am

    Hi Nagi, regarding the wine in this recipe you suggest to not use a Pinot as it’s too light but in your book you do suggest a Pinot (but half a cup more). Is the difference due to the marinating time?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 30, 2023 at 8:55 pm

      Hi Kym! Great pick up 🙂 You’re exactly right. The cookbook recipe is a more “restauranty” version that calls for overnight marinating in the wine so pinot is ideal for that. As this recipe doesn’t call for overnight marinating I do think using a bolder wine works better. But honestly, I’d still make this with pinot if that’s what I had! N x

      Reply
  4. Vesna says

    July 13, 2023 at 6:38 pm

    5 stars
    Made this tonight for my 50th. Made a lot of mess because my dish was a bit small but it was delicious.

    Reply
  5. Rie says

    July 2, 2023 at 4:38 pm

    Hi Nagi, I am cooking this Lamb Shank recipe, which is our family favorite! Could you please tell me the size of the beautiful white pot you used for this recipe? My Staub pot seems slightly too small to take all the ingredients. Thank you.

    Reply
  6. Noush says

    July 1, 2023 at 7:36 pm

    5 stars
    Amazing! Thanks for your detailed instructions and tips – it was very easy to make. I used half the amount of crushed tomatoes and a slightly sweeter full bodied red wine. So happy with the outcome and will make this for friends/family for years to come!

    Reply
  7. hellen may says

    June 30, 2023 at 8:11 pm

    ive viewd a few of your recipes and cant wait till i move into my own apartmment soon to try thm out myself,just looking at your photos makes me hungry,whn im not even hungry,lol

    Reply
  8. Leslie says

    June 29, 2023 at 10:02 am

    this was sooooo good! Not hard, it just takes a long time, but worth it.

    Reply
  9. Stacey says

    June 26, 2023 at 10:39 am

    5 stars
    Like every time I want to try a new recipe I search this website or go through the Dinner cookbook.

    We had lamb shanks to use and this seemed perfect. What an easy to put together delicious meal! The house had a wonderful smell while cooking.

    Having a younger daughter I decided to remove the meat from the bones and slightly mash the vegetables to create more of a thicker sauce. Served with a lovely tagliatelle and mopped up the rest with a crusty loaf (unfortunately not enough time to make Nagi’s amazing no knead bread).

    This recipe will now be added to one of our favourites. Absolutely amazing as always Nagi 🥰

    Reply
  10. Peta Sclater says

    June 20, 2023 at 9:44 pm

    Hi, just wondering what changes I would need to make to cook this in a slow cooker rather than the oven and would the flavour still be there? Thank you for a wonderful site full of delicious recipes.

    Reply
    • Lisasam says

      October 16, 2023 at 11:57 am

      It’s in the recipe notes.
      Point number 6.

      Reply
    • Brianna says

      October 5, 2023 at 9:28 pm

      How did you go making them in the slow cooker? Did you make any adjustments with anything?

      Reply
  11. Jacinta says

    June 20, 2023 at 6:34 pm

    5 stars
    I cooked this in the slow cooker so the shanks were really tender and tasted beautiful. I shredded the leftover meat, removing the fatty bits and used it to make an amazing shepherd’s pie.

    Reply
  12. Rod Watson says

    June 18, 2023 at 4:53 pm

    This dish also works well if it is accompanied by brussels sprouts cooked with bacon & slivered almonds, provided that the sprouts are cooked well. Further, I should have organised shanks to be “French cut” from the butcher.

    Reply
  13. Rod Watson says

    June 18, 2023 at 4:51 pm

    This dish also works well if it is accompanied by brussels sprouts cooked with bacon & slivered almonds, provided that the sprouts are cooked well.

    Reply
  14. Elisa says

    June 17, 2023 at 7:10 pm

    Excellent, excellent, excellent.
    I made this exactly as is, popped it in the oven, and went out. On our return, the house smelled amazing. Finished uncovered for 20 minutes & served with sweet potato mash & sautéed spinach. No one spoke it was so delicious! Thank you Nagi, your recipes never cease to please.

    Reply
  15. Rhonda says

    June 17, 2023 at 4:38 pm

    Delicious! Will definitely make again. Thank you Nagi

    Reply
  16. Veronica says

    June 10, 2023 at 4:18 am

    5 stars
    Delicious and easy to make!

    Reply
  17. Debra D. Overcash says

    June 8, 2023 at 9:41 am

    Did you have your butcher cut the end of the shank to make it shorter and easier to brown.?

    Reply
  18. sergy says

    June 7, 2023 at 9:42 pm

    Hi, I just came across boneless shanks in Coles which i didn’t see before. Oddly enough, cheaper than shanks with bones! $12 vs ~$15! Wonder if the recipe will work for those? Also, oven cooking is not technically “slow cooking” which is reserved for cooking at lower temp of 80-90C for long time. Can I use Instant pot slow cooking mode instead of oven? Tnx

    Reply
    • Jane Rogers says

      July 2, 2023 at 11:01 am

      Did you try it with the. Boneless shanks ? I came accross some on special too and looking forward to trying this recipe

      Reply
      • Kelly says

        September 4, 2023 at 2:09 pm

        I am also curious to know if the boneless would work! Any updates? 🙂

        Reply
  19. Ria says

    June 7, 2023 at 2:21 am

    I made this with 2 instead of 4 shanks, done everything the same only seasoned with dried rosemary as well as salt and pepper to begin with and OMG it was AMAZING!!!! Thank you so much for this recipe will definitely use again! ❤️❤️❤️

    Reply
  20. peter dutton says

    June 6, 2023 at 2:34 pm

    i was hoping that the sauce would be more of lamb not tomato. but still good.

    Reply
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