Lamb legs are a braising cut… well, they were, until now. This is the lamb leg steak, and it’s a cut begging to be used for quick weeknight dinners. Cross-cut from the leg, they’re bold, they’re cheap, and in a screaming cast iron skillet they’re done in twenty-five minutes. We polish the whole bite off with our take on the classic mint sauce, giving the cut just the burst of flavor it needs to make dinner feel a little extra.

Two cooked lamb leg steaks with mint sauce, garnished with lemon wedges and mint, served on a white oval plate. Grilled asparagus and sauce bowls are in the background.

Leg steaks aren’t for everyone, and nor are they easy to find. Freedom Run Farm is basically the only producer that we’ve seen putting them out and if you’re lucky enough to live in the Midwest, we’ve seen them stocked at Fresh Thyme Market. But if you’re here, you’re in the right place for learning to cook lamb recipes as we’ve been taking on every method possible.

The mistake everyone makes is pulling pan-seared lamb leg steaks at 130°F like they’re a ribeye. This cut doesn’t have the intramuscular fat to carry that; instead, it’s a little tougher. We’ve cooked enough of them in the Girl Carnivore Meat Labs to know: take them to 155–160°F, let the fat render against the cast iron until it chars at the edges, rest five minutes, and finish with a mint gremolata for a pop of bright herbacous flavor and you’ll totally agree, it’s a cut worth the hunt for Meat Nerds who love to cook.

Raw lamb leg steaks in a metal tray surrounded by olive oil, chopped garlic, fresh mint, parsley, a lemon, ground spices, salt, and pepper in small bowls on a beige surface.

🔪 Ingredients for Pan Seared Lamb Leg Steaks

For the Lamb

  • Lamb leg steaks: Bone-in cross-sections from the hind leg — and fair warning, you’re not going to find these at a standard butcher counter. The one producer we’ve consistently seen cutting them is Freedom Run Farm; order directly or check a Fresh Thyme Market if you’re in the Midwest. At least 3/4 inch thick — anything thinner overcooks before you build a crust.
  • Olive oil
  • Garlic cloves, minced
  • Ground cumin
  • Kosher salt & Black pepper

For the Mint Gremolata

  • Fresh mint, finely chopped: Fresh only. Dried mint at this volume tastes like toothpaste.
  • Fresh parsley, finely chopped: Flat-leaf has more flavor than curly. Either works.
  • Lemon zest: One whole lemon, zested fresh. The aromatics in pre-zested lemon are mostly gone before you open the container.
  • Lemon juice: Squeezed right before you mix. The acid is doing the heavy lifting here – it cuts through the fat and wakes up the herbs.
  • Garlic clove, minced: One. This isn’t a garlic sauce.
  • Olive oil: Binds it and carries the flavor into the meat on contact.
  • Kosher salt & Black pepper

Equipment

  • Cast iron skillet: The pan has to hold heat when cold meat hits it. Cast iron does. Carbon steel does. Stainless steel is a distant third. Non-stick won’t sear — skip it.
  • Instant-read thermometer: The window between perfect and overdone on a lean cut is about 10 degrees. Use the thermometer.
  • Small food processor: Makes the gremolata cohesive in 30 seconds. A sharp knife works too — it’ll just take a couple extra minutes and be a little more rustic.

📝 How to Make Pan Seared Lamb Leg Steaks

  1. Pull the steaks from the fridge 20–30 minutes before cooking. Cold meat in a hot pan stalls the sear and costs you crust.
  2. Pat the steaks completely dry. Paper towels, both sides, no moisture left on the surface. This is not optional.
  3. Mix olive oil, garlic, cumin, kosher salt, and pepper. Rub it on both sides and let the steaks sit while the pan comes to temperature.
  4. Heat the cast iron over medium-high for at least 3 minutes — it should be hot enough that a drop of water evaporates on contact immediately. The rub has enough oil; don’t add more to the pan.
  5. Lay the steaks in without crowding. Cook 3–5 minutes per side depending on thickness. You’re looking for a deep brown crust and fat at the edges that’s starting to render and char. Don’t move them around — let the crust form and release on its own. For steaks over 1 inch thick, finish in a 400°F oven after searing both sides.
  6. Pull at 150°F. Carryover heat during the rest brings them to 155–160°F. Transfer to a cutting board, tent loosely, and leave them alone for 5 minutes minimum.
  7. While the lamb rests, pulse mint, parsley, lemon zest, lemon juice, garlic, olive oil, salt, and pepper in the food processor until roughly chopped and holding together. Taste it — it should be bright and a little sharp. Adjust salt if needed.
  8. Spoon the gremolata over the steaks while they’re still warm. Squeeze a little fresh lemon over everything. Serve immediately.
Two pan seared lamb leg steaks on a white oval plate with lemon wedges and mint leaves, surrounded by asparagus, couscous, lemon slices, and a bowl of green sauce.

🔄 Substitutions

  • Lamb shoulder chops instead of leg steaks: More forgiving – pull them from the heat at 130°F for medium-rare. The shoulder has more marbling so it stays juicy at lower temps. Same pan, same method, less precision required. See our pan-seared lamb shoulder chops.
  • Grill instead of cast iron: 450–500°F direct heat, same internal temp target. You get char marks instead of a full crust, and you lose some of the rendered fat effect from the skillet. Still good. Full method in our grilled lamb leg steaks.
  • Lamb loin chops: More tender, smaller, pull at 130°F. The gremolata works on them too, but the eating experience is different — less assertive, easier cook window. See our Greek pan-seared lamb loin chops.
  • Dried mint in the gremolata: Don’t – it can taste medicinal. If you can’t get fresh mint, drop it entirely and double the parsley – you get a cleaner herby flavor that still works.

💡 Meat Nerd Tips

  • Medium is not a compromise on this cut — it’s the target. I know everything in your instincts says pull lamb at medium-rare. For shoulder chops, yes. For leg steaks, no. The fat pocket near the bone stays waxy and unpleasant at 130°F. At 155–160°F it renders into the meat. Cook one batch underdone and one right, and you’ll never go back to medium-rare on this cut.
  • The cumin isn’t optional. I’ve tested this with and without it. Without the cumin, the rub is fine… salt, pepper, garlic. With it, the flavors pop.
  • Two steaks max per 10-inch skillet. Three steaks in that pan and you’re steaming, not searing. The temperature drops, the moisture can’t escape, and you lose the crust entirely. If you’re cooking for four, do two batches and hold the first in a 200°F oven.
  • Make the gremolata while the meat rests, not before. We’ve made it 30 minutes ahead and refrigerated it. The mint goes dull, and the lemon gets lost. Made fresh and spooned onto warm meat, it blooms – the heat pulls the oils out of the herbs and the aroma is to die for.
A plate with pan seared lamb steak topped with green sauce, served with asparagus, couscous, a lemon wedge, and garnished with mint; additional plates and bowls surround it.

🍽️ What to Serve with Pan Seared Lamb Leg Steaks

  • Smashed or roasted potatoes: The gremolata drips off the steak and pools on the plate – you want something there to catch it. Crispy smashed potatoes are the best vehicle I’ve found for that.
  • Asparagus and couscous: The perfect easy sides to round out this meal.
  • Tzatziki: Serve it cold on the side. The cool yogurt against the hot lamb fat is a better contrast than anything else on the table, and it extends the herb story without doubling down on mint.
  • Simple cucumber and feta salad dressed with lemon: the perfect light and fresh bite to pair with this.

🧊 Leftovers and Storage

  • Refrigerate: Airtight container, up to 3 days. Store any leftover gremolata separately.
  • Freeze: Slice first, wrap tight in plastic then foil, freeze up to 2 months. Don’t freeze the gremolata, make it fresh.
  • Reheat: Thin slices in a hot cast iron pan for about 60–90 seconds per side. Just enough to warm through without cooking further. Microwave turns the surface rubbery and the meat chewy.
  • Leftover move: Cold sliced lamb on flatbread with hummus and whatever gremolata survived. Better than it has any right to be.

Have you tried this recipe? Do us a favor and rate the recipe card with the  ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ and drop a comment to help out the next reader.

Pan Seared Lamb Leg Steaks with Mint Gremolata

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Prep: 10 minutes
Cook: 10 minutes
Total: 25 minutes
Servings: 2 servings (1 steak per person)
Seared lamb leg steaks with a bone, topped with mint sauce, served with lemon wedges and mint leaves on a white plate.
Cast iron so hot it smokes, fat that renders and chars at the edges, a mint gremolata that blooms the second it hits warm meat. Lamb leg steaks the way they were meant to be cooked.

Recommended Equipment

Ingredients  

  • 2 lamb leg steaks
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 2 garlic cloves minced
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
  • 3/4 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon black pepper

For the Mint Gremolata

  • 1/4 cup fresh mint finely chopped
  • 1/4 cup fresh parsley finely chopped
  • 1 teaspoon lemon zest
  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice
  • 1 garlic clove minced
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon black pepper

Instructions 

Bring to Temp

  • Pull the lamb steaks from the fridge 20–30 minutes before cooking. Pat them completely dry with paper towels.

Season

  • Mix olive oil, minced garlic, ground cumin, kosher salt, and black pepper. Rub on both sides of each steak.
    Two raw marinated lamb steaks with visible seasonings on a white plate, placed on a beige surface with a brown cloth, mint leaves, and a lemon nearby.

Heat the Pan

  • Heat a cast iron skillet over medium-high heat for at least 3 minutes until smoking hot. No additional oil needed.

Sear

  • Place steaks in the skillet without crowding. Cook 3–5 minutes per side until the crust is deep brown and the edges show rendered fat. Do not move them. (Steaks over 1 inch thick: finish in a 400°F oven after searing both sides.)
    Two seasoned lamb leg steaks searing in a black cast iron skillet.
  • If the pan isn't smoking when you add the steaks, take it off the heat and wait. A pan that's almost hot enough won't give you a good sear. We often test the heat by gently placing the fat cap onto the pan; if it doesn't immediately sizzle, we wait to add the meat.

Rest

  • Pull when an instant-read thermometer reads 150°F – or when the meat has a deep sear and the fat starts to curl in at the edges – the carryover cooking brings them to 155–160°F during rest. Tent loosely and rest for 5.

Make the Gremolata

  • While the lamb rests, pulse mint, parsley, lemon zest, lemon juice, garlic, olive oil, salt, and pepper in a small food processor until roughly chopped and cohesive. Taste and adjust salt.
    A small bowl filled with green mint gremolata sauce, placed on a light-colored surface with parts of other dishes visible nearby.

Serve

  • Spoon gremolata over the warm steaks. Finish with a squeeze of fresh lemon. Serve immediately.
    Two cooked lamb leg steaks with mint sauce, garnished with lemon wedges and mint, served on a white oval plate. Grilled asparagus and sauce bowls are in the background.

Notes

  • Lamb leg steaks are leaner than shoulder chops – pulling at medium-rare (130°F) leaves the fat waxy. Medium (155–160°F) is correct for this cut.
  • Two steaks at most in a 10-inch skillet; otherwise, you’re crowding the pan, and you won’t get a good sear. Cook them in batches and hold in a 200°F oven if needed to keep them warm.
  • Make the gremolata while the lamb rests, not ahead of time. The fresh herbs bloom against the warm meat.
  • Refrigerate leftovers in an airtight container up to 3 days. Reheat in a hot cast-iron pan for 60–90 seconds per side. Avoid microwaving leftovers.

Nutrition

Serving: 1serving | Calories: 457kcal | Carbohydrates: 4g | Protein: 40g | Fat: 31g | Saturated Fat: 6g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 3g | Monounsaturated Fat: 20g | Cholesterol: 127mg | Sodium: 1317mg | Potassium: 558mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 0.4g | Vitamin A: 883IU | Vitamin C: 17mg | Calcium: 60mg | Iron: 5mg
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Mediterranean

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Quick Summary

Pan-seared lamb leg steaks aren’t a beginner cut, and they don’t pretend to be. Get the cast iron smoking hot, cook them to medium so the fat actually renders, and don’t touch the gremolata until the meat is resting. Nail those three things, and this is one of the best 25-minute dinners you can put on the table.

❓ FAQs

Do I need to marinate lamb leg steaks before cooking?

Not for this recipe. The cumin rub does the flavor work and the high heat does the rest. A marinade with acid will start breaking down the surface of the meat — and if there’s any moisture left when it hits the pan, you lose the sear. If you want to marinate for a grilled version, see our grilled lamb leg steaks which uses a lemon-herb marinade built for that method.

Why is my lamb leg steak tough even when I hit the right temp?

Two likely culprits: you didn’t rest it long enough, or your steaks were too thin and overcooked before a crust formed. Five minutes minimum rest, no shortcuts — the muscle fibers need time to relax and the juices to redistribute. For thin steaks under 3/4 inch, the window between raw and overdone is too narrow for a proper sear. Ask for thicker cuts or adjust your heat and time accordingly.

What’s the difference between lamb leg steaks and lamb chops?

Chops come from the rib or loin — smaller, more tender, faster cooking, pull at 130°F. Lamb leg steaks are cross-sections from the hind leg: meatier, bolder in flavor, and they need to go to medium so the fat renders properly. Different cuts, different techniques, both worth knowing. Our Greek pan seared lamb loin chops cover the loin chop method if you want to compare.

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About the Author

Kita Roberts is the meat maven and award-winning recipe developer behind Girl Carnivore®, with 15+ years of grilling, smoking, and cooking experience. Her recipes are tested on everything from backyard grills to professional smokers – and always built for real home cooks.
As the lead creative force behind Girl Carnivore®, she is widely recognized as an authority on all things meat.

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