Authentic Persian Restaurant 

Lamb Dizi

Dizi-ye Goosfand (دیزیِ گوشتِ گوسفند) – “Lamb Dizi” is the heartiest of Persian one-pot meals: lamb shanks, chickpeas and white beans slow-cooked with potatoes, tomatoes, dried limes and turmeric in a small stone or clay crock called a dizi. When it reaches melting tenderness, the broth (āb) is poured off and enjoyed like soup with torn flatbread, while the remaining solids are mashed into a rich pâté called goosht-kubideh and scooped up with more bread – two courses from one pot. In bazaars and old-style dizi-sarā cafés, strangers still share a tableful of these bubbling crocks, then linger over tea and debate politics – a ritual that earned the dish a reputation as Iran’s most sociable comfort food. cyruscrafts


Core Ingredients (4–5 individual crocks)

Ingredient Metric US
Lamb shanks, cut in 2–3 cm pieces 800 g 1¾ lb
Chickpeas, soaked overnight 150 g ¾ cup
White beans, soaked overnight 150 g ¾ cup
Potatoes, peeled & halved 400 g 3 med.
Tomatoes, quartered 300 g 2 large
Onion, quartered 1 large 1 large
Dried limes (limu amani), pierced 3–4 3–4
Tomato paste 2 Tbsp 2 Tbsp
Turmeric 1 tsp 1 tsp
Cinnamon (optional) ¼ tsp ¼ tsp
Salt & pepper to taste to taste
Water ≈1.8 L ≈7 ½ c
Sangak or lavash bread plenty

Quick Preparation

  1. Layer & start – Divide meat, legumes, onion, dried limes and spices among the crocks; add tomato paste, tomatoes and potatoes on top. Cover with water so everything is submerged by 2 cm.

  2. Slow cook – Seal crocks with foil or lids and simmer very gently (or bake at 160 °C / 320 °F) 3–4 h until lamb falls from the bone and beans are creamy.

  3. Separate – Strain each crock: ladle the clear, saffron-gold broth into one bowl (āb). Transfer solids to another bowl.

  4. Mash – With a wooden pestle (goosht-kub) or potato masher, pound meat, potatoes and legumes into a coarse purée, adjusting salt.

  5. Serve – Tear bread into the broth to make tilit (soaked soup) and spoon up. Spread the mash on more bread, topping each bite with fresh herbs, raw onion, torshi pickles and a squeeze of lime.


Variations

Name Twist
Dizi-ye Bandari Adds hot peppers & cumin for a Persian-Gulf kick.
Dizi-ye Bozbāsh Replaces tomato with herb-heavy green sauce.
Kalle-Dizi Made with lamb head & trotters for collagen-rich broth.
Pressure-Pot Shortcut 45 min on high after coming to pressure delivers near-traditional texture for weeknights.

Pairing Tips

  • Sides: sabzi-khordan herb platter, torshi pickles, mast-o-musir yogurt dip.

  • Drink: ice-cold doogh (minty yogurt soda) during the meal, strong black tea with rock candy after.

  • Leftovers: mix mashed solids with an egg, pan-fry into crisp patties for breakfast – a thrift tactic born after historic Persian famines. cyruscrafts


Nutritional Snapshot (per two-course serving)

  • ≈ 620 cal 36 g protein 23 g fat 66 g carbs
    High in iron, zinc, B-vitamins and collagen; the dried-lime broth supplies vitamin C and gut-soothing acidity.

Slow-cooked, thrifty, and irresistibly communal, Lamb Dizi turns simple pantry staples into a feast that invites conversation as much as nourishment.