Create rich, comforting dishes with our Lamb Neck Stewing (Bone-In) — a traditional butcher’s cut prized for its deep flavour and melt-in-the-mouth tenderness. Slow-cooked on the bone, lamb neck releases natural richness, producing beautifully thick sauces and hearty, warming meals.
Lamb neck on the bone is a traditional stewing cut taken from the neck of the lamb, prized for its marbling and connective tissue. Cooked low and slow, it becomes meltingly tender and produces a rich, naturally thickened sauce — which is why it's a staple of Caribbean, British and Mediterranean slow cooking.
- Premium British lamb neck, cut bone-in
- Ideal for stews, curries, braising and slow cooking
- Naturally rich and full of flavour
- Bone-in for deeper stock and sauce quality
- Perfect for hearty family meals and winter warmers
Why It’s Hard to Find
Lamb neck on the bone is one of those cuts that proper cooks swear by, but supermarkets quietly dropped. It takes patience to prepare, knowledge to cook, and respect for flavour — which is exactly why most mass retailers don’t bother.
Traditional butchers prize lamb neck bone-in because the marrow, connective tissue and slow-melting fat deliver depth you simply can’t fake. When cooked low and slow, it produces rich, gelatinous sauces and tender meat that falls clean from the bone. That’s why it’s still a staple in Caribbean, British and Mediterranean kitchens — and why we keep it exactly as it should be.
Best Recipes for Lamb Neck on the Bone
• Caribbean-style lamb neck stew – Brown hard, then simmer with thyme, allspice, garlic and chilli until the meat collapses
• Slow cooker lamb neck stew – Ideal for busy days; 6–8 hours on low for deep, rounded flavour
• Instant Pot lamb neck bone stew – Pressure cooking brings richness fast while keeping the meat juicy
• Irish stew with lamb neck bones – Potatoes, onions and stock soaked through with bone-deep flavour
• Red wine braised lamb neck – A classic British approach that turns humble cuts into something special
The Black Farmer was founded by Wilfred Emmanuel-Jones MBE on a Devon farm, with a simple belief: proper food, raised with care, made for everyone's table.