Braised Lamb — Northwestern Slow-Cooked Comfort
Quick Info
- Flavor
- Deep, savory lamb richness with warming spices. Slow-braised until the meat is fall-apart tender, infused with cumin, star anise, and soy sauce in a thick golden-brown sauce.
- Texture
- Fork-tender lamb pieces that pull apart easily, bathed in a thick, glossy golden-brown braising sauce with soft potato and carrot chunks
- Spice Level
- 🌶️ — Barely spicy — warmth comes from aromatic spices like cumin and star anise rather than chili heat
- Temperature
- Served Hot
Ingredients
Allergens
Confirmed
Possible
These ingredients may vary by restaurant. Ask your server to confirm.
The Story
黄焖 (yellow braising) is a traditional cooking technique from northern China where ingredients are slowly simmered in a soy-based sauce until the liquid reduces to a thick, golden-brown glaze. In Xi’an and across the northwestern provinces where lamb is a dietary staple thanks to the region’s Muslim Hui community, this dish is cold-weather comfort food at its finest. Unlike the more famous cumin lamb skewers of the night market, this is a home-style dish — patient, warming, and deeply satisfying.
What to Expect
A clay pot or large bowl arrives steaming with chunks of bone-in lamb submerged in a rich, amber-colored sauce. The lamb is braised so long that it nearly falls off the bone. Soft potato wedges and carrot pieces have absorbed the braising liquid, taking on a deep savory flavor. The aroma is intoxicating — warm cumin, star anise, and slow-cooked lamb. The sauce is thick and clings to every piece of meat.
Tips
This dish is hearty and filling — one portion with rice is a complete meal. Eat it while it’s piping hot; the lamb fat can solidify as it cools. Use the thick sauce generously over steamed rice. If you see it served in a clay pot, be careful — the pot stays extremely hot throughout the meal. This is an excellent cold-weather order.