La Mesa Eats
RecipesAboutContact
🇦🇷ESBrowse Recipes→
🇦🇷ES
La Mesa Eats

Real recipes from an enthusiastic home cook with absolutely no formal training.

Recipes

  • Weeknight Dinners
  • Baking & Breads
  • Soups & Stews
  • Breakfast
  • Desserts
  • Vegetarian
  • Browse all →

Connect

  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • YouTube
  • Newsletter

Pages

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy

© 2026 La Mesa Eats. All rights reserved.

Made with butter & stubbornness

Herb-crusted rack of lamb with rosemary
  1. Home
  2. ›
  3. Recipes
  4. ›
  5. Herb-Crusted Rack of Lamb
Dinner

Herb-Crusted Rack of Lamb

Rack of lamb is one of those things that sounds much more technically demanding than it actually is. The crust does most of the work — it protects the meat, basts it as it roasts, and delivers an enormous amount of flavour in a short cooking time.

I have made this for dinner parties and for Tuesday nights. It works for both. The key is the sear before the oven — without it the crust goes on raw meat and you lose the flavour foundation that makes everything else better.

Use a meat thermometer the first time you make this. Once you have seen what 57°C looks like when you cut into it, you will not need it again. Medium-rare lamb is something genuinely special.

How to Make Herb-Crusted Rack of Lamb

Two-stage cooking: a hard sear on the stovetop, then a fast roast in a very hot oven. The rest does the rest.

All Ingredients

Raw french-trimmed rack of lamb ready to cook

1. 1. Prepare the Lamb

  1. 1

    Take lamb out of the fridge 30 minutes before cooking — this is not optional, cold meat seizes in a hot pan

  2. 2

    Pat completely dry with paper towels. Season heavily all over with salt and pepper

  3. 3

    Preheat oven to 230°C (450°F)

2. 2. Sear

  1. 1

    Heat a thin film of oil in an oven-safe skillet over high heat until smoking

  2. 2

    Sear fat-side down for 2–3 minutes until deep golden brown

  3. 3

    Sear each remaining side for 1 minute, then transfer to a plate to cool for 5 minutes

3. 3. Crust & Roast

  1. 1

    Mix breadcrumbs, garlic, rosemary, parsley, and olive oil until the crumbs are evenly moistened

  2. 2

    Brush the seared lamb with Dijon mustard, then press the herb crust firmly over the mustardy surface

  3. 3

    Roast 20–22 minutes for medium-rare, 25 minutes for medium. Rest 8–10 minutes before carving

How to Serve

Slice between each bone into individual cutlets and arrange crust-side up on a warm platter. Do not lay them flat — standing them up or leaning them keeps the crust from getting soggy against the plate.

Creamy mashed potato or white bean puree underneath is ideal. Roasted asparagus or broccolini alongside. A simple red wine jus or a mint gremolata if you want to go the extra step.

The Recipe

⏱Prep20 min
⏱Cook25 min
⏱Total45 min
🍽Serves4
⭐DifficultyMedium

Ingredients

for 4 serves

Instructions

  1. 1

    Remove the lamb racks from the refrigerator 30 minutes before cooking to bring them to room temperature. Preheat your oven to 230°C (450°F). Pat the lamb completely dry with paper towels and season generously all over with salt and pepper.

  2. 2

    Heat a thin film of olive oil in a large oven-safe skillet over high heat until smoking. Sear the lamb racks fat-side down for 2–3 minutes until deep golden-brown, then sear each side for 1 minute. Transfer to a plate and allow to cool for 5 minutes.

  3. 3

    While the lamb cools, combine the breadcrumbs, minced garlic, rosemary, parsley, and 3 tablespoons olive oil in a bowl. Mix well until the breadcrumbs are evenly moistened. Season with a pinch of salt and pepper.

  4. 4

    Brush the fat-side and meaty side of each rack generously with Dijon mustard. Press the herb-breadcrumb mixture firmly all over the mustardy surface, creating an even crust about 5mm thick.

  5. 5

    Stand the racks upright in a roasting tin with the bones interlocked to support each other (or lay them flat on a rack). Roast in the preheated oven for 20–22 minutes for medium-rare (internal temperature 57–60°C / 135–140°F), or 25 minutes for medium.

  6. 6

    Rest the lamb loosely tented with foil for 8–10 minutes before carving. Slice between each bone into individual cutlets and serve immediately, crust-side up, alongside roasted vegetables or creamy mashed potatoes.

Tips & Notes

  • Rest the lamb. This is not negotiable. Cutting into it too early sends all the juices onto the board instead of staying in the meat. 8 minutes minimum under loose foil.
  • The internal temperature you are aiming for: 57–60°C (135–140°F) for medium-rare. Pull it from the oven at 55°C — it will carry-cook to the right temperature while resting.
  • Fresh breadcrumbs from day-old sourdough make a noticeably better crust than dried packaged breadcrumbs. Pulse the bread in a food processor — it takes 20 seconds and makes a real difference to the texture.
  • Ask your butcher to french-trim the bones. It costs nothing extra and makes the presentation completely different. The cleaned white bones look stunning on the plate.
  • If the crust is browning too fast before the meat is cooked, tent loosely with foil for the last 5 minutes.

Nutrition per serving

Calories
520 kcal
Protein
42 g
Carbohydrates
8 g
Total Fat
35 g
Dietary Fiber
1 g
Sodium
320 mg

Values are estimates. Actual nutrition may vary.

Reviews

Leave a Review

Your email address will not be displayed publicly. Fields marked * are required.