barnsley chop with redcurrant sauce

barnsley chop with redcurrant sauce

I spent some time over Easter up in the Peak District. Mostly it was spent gadding about Alton Towers and tearing around Cbeebies Land (which is great fun by the way).

We also took in some of the local towns like the unfathomable Alpine-influenced Ilam, which looks like something from the Sound of Music hewn from the mountainside and dropped in the middle of England. There’s also the charmingly old-fashioned Tissington constructed around elaborate Well Dressing ceremonies with the tiniest network of shops such as a butcher’s, candle shop and sweet shop. We also enjoyed Cheadle and it’s mightily impressive Pugin’s church which was fastidiously detailed.

After a long day visiting the beautiful Chatsworth House and taking in their enviable farm shop (which the butcher mentioned to me takes £3.5 million a year over the meat counter alone), we and the friends we went with stopped off in Monyash. We plumped for dinner in The Bull’s Head, a pub dating back from 1619. Isn’t it crazy in this country we can have pubs that are 400 years old?

bulls head monyash

After a nice drop of cider we enjoyed an old fashioned pub dinner. I saw something on the menu I hadn’t seen in years and given it was April, was perfect. A Barnsley Chop. Taken from the lower back of the animal, this perfect double chop gives you that great mix of crispy fat, chewy outer meat and tender up to the bone.

bulls head barnsley chop

With steak-cut chips on the side it’s just the thing after  hard day’s sightseeing. It was glorious. So much so, that I wanted to have it again at home. Before heading back, I popped into the butcher’s in the aforementioned Tissington and grabbed some chops for another dinner. (The butcher also looked like he was going to kill me but that’s another story for another time).

A Barnsley Chop needs to be cooked carefully to get it right. It’s so thick that you need to cook it right through to the bone (to your liking) and yet want a high heat to render that fat and caramelise the surface. I start mine on a high heat to get that fat melting then turn it down as I flip it on the side.

barnsley chop in the pan

To complement it, a tangy sweet gravy made from pan juices flavoured with redcurrant that helps punch against the fat. If you’re ever in Monyash, stop by The Bull’s Head for a chop.

Want more information about the Peak District? Try 10Adventures. All the routes on it, including the GPS coordinates, are free to use and download for anyone.

barnsley chop with redcurrant sauce

barnsley chop with redcurrant sauce

Gary @ BigSpud
Course Main Course
Cuisine English
Servings 2 people

Ingredients
  

  • 2 Barnsley chops about 300g each
  • 100 ml red wine or other wine. Water would be fine too
  • 400 ml chicken stock
  • 1 tablespoon redcurrant jelly

Instructions
 

  • Place the lamb fat side down for a couple of minutes until crisp. Turn the heat down to medium, flip on to one side and cook for 3 minutes. Flip on the other side and cook for another 5 - 7 minutes. This will vary greatly from chop to chop. Cook until the internal temperature when tested with a probe reaches 55C for rare, 60C for medium. Rest on a warm plate or board while you make the sauce.
  • Turn the heat back up and add the red wine. Use this to pick up the crusty bits on the bottom of the pan. Bubble away until reduced to almost nothing. Add the stock and bubble furiously until syrupy, add redcurrant jelly, check for seasoning and pour over the lamb. Serve with chips and broccoli

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