Mongolian Lamb is an Aussie favourite, found on the menu of every suburban Chinese restaurant. At “posher” establishments, it might even arrive at the table on a hot iron plate, sizzling and spitting for theatric effect!
Sizzle aside, this homemade version is a near perfect replica. Even the velveted texture of the lamb!
Mongolian Lamb
Mongolian Lamb is a Chinese stir fry that’s made with tenderised, marinated strips of lamb in a dark sweet-savoury sauce perfumed with Chinese Five Spice.
It’s not an authentic Chinese dish, and almost certainly has nothing to do with Mongolia. The truth is nobody really knows why it’s called Mongolian Lamb. But it’s a Chinese-Australian takeaway classic nonetheless that every Aussie knows and loves!
Is this the lamb version of American Mongolian Beef?
Nope! Different sauce – while the American Mongolian Beef is also sweet, it doesn’t have the hoisin five spice flavour. Also Mongolian Beef is typically crispy fried strips of beef. Both are equally delicious in different ways!
Restaurant copycat
Every restaurant does their Mongolian Lamb differently and there isn’t, to my knowledge, a standard recipe. This is the RecipeTin Family version, a copycat of the Mongolian Lamb we had as kids, when going out to the local Chinese restaurant for dinner was a rare and special treat!
Mongolian Lamb lovers – this will knock your socks off. I dare to say it’s a perfect replica (well, minus the cast iron pan sizzling!)
What goes in Mongolian Lamb Marinade
Here’s what you need for the Mongolian Lamb marinade which tenderises the lamb – Chinese restaurant style!
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Baking soda (bi-carb) and cornflour / cornstarch are used to tenderise the lamb as Chinese restaurants do so it’s soft and tender, whether using a pricy cut like backstrap OR economical slow cooking cut like shoulder. More on this below;
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Lamb – the best cut is backstrap followed by mid loin chops then shoulder. However, ANY cut of lamb can be used because the meat is tenderised – you just need to tenderise tougher cuts for longer than tender cuts. See list below.
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Soy sauce and Chinese Cooking Wine(Shaoxing wine) – these add flavour and salt into the lamb. See recipe notes for substitute for Chinese Cooking Wine.
Best lamb for Mongolian Lamb
The best cut is backstrap followed by mid loin chops then shoulder.
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Backstrap – a very tender cut that’s quite lean, typically the cut of choice for posher Chinese restaurants;
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Mid loin chops – better value than backstrap but cut from the same part of lamb so similar tenderness; and
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Shoulder – excellent economical option with great lamb flavour. Suburban Chinese restaurants seem to typically opt for for this cut.
Other lamb cuts and marinating time
Having said that, Mongolian Lamb is excellent made with ANY cut of lamb because the marinade tenderises the meat (see below for more on tenderising). Economical cuts need to be tenderised for longer (24 hours) but once cooked, they are almost as tender as expensive cuts like lamb backstrap!
Here is a list of common lamb cuts and how long they need to be marinated for – note that Mongolian Lamb is excellent made with any of these, it comes down to price, marinating time and convenience of cutting:
Tender Cuts – 2 hour marinade
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backstrap / fillet / loin (different name for same cut) – my first choice when discounted!
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mid loin chops – my most used, you need ~700g/1.4lb (you lose alot in fat and bone)
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chump chop and lamb rump (roast or steak. FYI, this is chump chop minus bone!) – excellent leaner option that’s less expensive than backstrap. (Lean doesn’t mean dry in this recipe because of the tenderising marinade)
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cutlets (I never use, too expensive!)
Economical Cuts – 24 hour marinade
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lamb shoulder – my 3rd most used, excellent ribbons of fat but need trim around sinewy bits which won’t tenderise;
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leg (steak or roast) – leaner alternative to shoulder with less sinewy bits to cut around, lamb flavour not as strong; and
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forequarter chops and neck – bit fatty but really great lamb flavour.
TIPS choosing a cut:
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Economical cuts tend to have better lamb flavour than Tender Cuts but you do need to cut around rivers of sinewy bits which won’t tenderise even with the magic marinade;
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“Posher” Chinese restaurants typically use Backstrap;
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Your everyday suburban restaurant typically uses economical cuts – lamb shoulder seems common;
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Lamb Rump / chump chops is my pick for easy to cut but cheaper than backstrap.
Why tenderise expensive, tender cuts of lamb?
Because the lamb is sliced thinly so it’s impossible to cook until “perfectly pink inside” like you do with any lamb chops or steaks so it tends to go tough. Tenderising makes lamb impossible to overcook as well as that velvety, ultra moist texture of meat in dishes served at Chinese restaurants.
Beef version!
This is excellent made with beef and many restaurants offer the beef version. Follow recipe (including tenderising) using beef cuts as follows:
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2 hour marinade/tenderise – Rump, flank, sirloin/strip/Porterhouse (same thing), t-bone and scotch fillet/boneless rib eye.
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24 hours – Chuck beef, gravy beef, oyster beef and other traditional stewing beef, blade, bolar blade. Only cut I do NOT recommend is brisket (doesn’t seem to tenderise well)
Tenderising lamb meat
Baking soda / bi-carb and cornflour/cornstarch are the secret ingredients that tenderise the lamb meat. It’s a technique called “velveting” that is used by Chinese restaurants, and it’s the reason why the meat in your favourite Chinese dishes are always so soft.
There’s various methods used. The two that I employ are:
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Tenderising Marinade using a small amount of baking soda/cornflour combination (like in this Mongolian Lamb and Sweet and Sour Pork) along with flavours, left to marinade for 1 hour+ or overnight; and
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“Hard and Fast” Tenderising Method which calls for more baking soda, a shorter marinating time (20 – 30 minutes) and rinsing. This is my base method for chicken and beef slices for stir fries.
Mongolian Lamb Sauce ingredients
And here’s what you need for the Mongolian Lamb Sauce:
All the key ingredients here feature in Tier 1 of my Asian Market Shopping List!
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Chinese Five Spice Powder – a spice blend of five spices (shock horror! 😂), very common nowadays, sold at grocery stores and no more expensive than other spices. Also used in Chinese Beef and Broccoli, Chicken and Broccoli, Sticky Chinese Wings, Crispy Chinese Pork Belly. Search “five spice powder” for more recipes (pro tip: click “Ingredients” to see all recipes that use it);
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Hoisin is a key flavouring ingredient for Mongolian Lamb Sauce. Sweet with savoury undertones, perfumed with Five Spice Powder, you’ll find it in the Asian aisle at any supermarket nowadays. Lee Kum Kee, Changs or Tung Chun are all good brands – AVOID Ayam. Wrong colour and flavour;
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Chinese cooking wine – essential for authentic Chinese restaurant sauces, and this recipe is no exception! Substitute with: dry sherry, Mirin or low sodium chicken stock/broth.
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Chilli paste – I like using Sambal Oelak or Chilli Garlic Sauce because both these have extra flavouring in them. But anything spicy will do – even Sriracha. This is not an overly spicy dish but Mongolian Lamb does have a bit of chilli in it;
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Dark soy sauce is what makes the sauce a deep mahogany colour and adds flavour, whereas light soy or all purpose soy sauce adds salt without colouring the sauce more. Read more about soy sauces – Soy Sauce; different types, when to use what, best substitutes; and
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Sesame oil, toasted – toasted sesame oil is brown and has more flavour than untoasted (which is yellow). Default sesame oil sold in Australia is toasted, untoasted is harder to find.
What goes in the Mongolian Lamb stir fry
Just 3 simple things required for the stir fry!
How to make Mongolian Lamb
Nice and simple: marinate the lamb, mix the sauce, then it all gets cooked in one wok or skillet in a matter of minutes!
Once the sauce goes in, simmer for a minute or two until the sauce thickens beautifully, dark and glossy.
How to serve Mongolian Lamb
Rice is essential because it would be criminal not to be able to scoop up huge spoonfuls of rice soaked in that wickedly good Mongolian Lamb sauce. If you’re attempting the low carb thing (and believe me, I force myself onto that bandwagon every now and then), cauliflower rice is an excellent alternative though if you have the time, try Cauliflower Fried Rice instead (this makes low-carb infinitely more enjoyable).
For your vegetable quota, you could add around 2 cups of vegetables like carrots and zucchini chopped into batons into this stir fry. Cook them with the onion before adding the lamb as they will take longer to cook.
Don’t use broccoli or broccolini because they heads will soak up too much of the sauce. Sauce hogs!
Otherwise, just chop up fresh veggies or steam a pile of any vegetables and toss with Sesame Dressing or try this brilliant salad, Chinese Lettuce with Creamy Sesame Sauce.
Excellent quick vegetable side option for all things Asian that I use regularly! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Mongolian Lamb
Ingredients
Lamb and marinade:
- 350g / 12 oz lamb meat (backstrap/fillet, mid loin chops, shoulder - or any cut in Note 1) , thinly sliced 2 - 3 mm / 1/10" (boneless weight, fat trimmed)
- 1/2 tsp baking soda (bicarb soda) (tenderiser, Note 2)
- 1 tsp cornflour / cornstarch
- 1 tbsp light soy sauce (or all purpose, Note 3)
- 1 tbsp Chinese cooking wine (Note 4 subs)
Sauce:
- 3 tsp cornflour / cornstarch
- 2 tsp dark soy sauce (Note 3)
- 1 tsp light soy sauce (or all purpose, Note 3)
- 1 1/2 tsp Sambal Oelak or other chilli paste (or omit for no spice)
- 3 tbsp hoisin sauce (I used Lee Kum Kee brand)
- 2 tbsp Chinese cooking wine (Note 4 subs)
- 1/4 tsp Chinese five spice powder (Note 5)
- 3/4 cup water
- 1 tsp sesame oil , toasted (Note 6)
Stir fry:
- 2 tbsp vegetable oil (or canola or peanut)
- 1 large onion , cut into large 2.5cm / 1" squares
- 2 cloves garlic , finely chopped
- 4 green onions , cut into 5cm/2" lengths
Instructions
Tenderise Lamb:
- Combine lamb and marinade ingredients, mix very well. Cover and refrigerate to marinate and tenderise the lamb.
- Marinate 2 hours - Backstrap, Midloin chops and other listed Tender Cuts in Note 1.
- Marinate 24 hours - lamb shoulder and other listed Economical Cuts in Note 1. (Bare minimum marinade times is 6 hrs).
Cooking:
- Sauce: Mix cornflour with the soy sauces, then mix in the remaining sauce ingredients. (Note 7)
- Cook onion: Heat oil over high heat in a wok or heavy based skillet. Add onions, and stir fry for 30 seconds until starting to colour. Add garlic and toss through quickly.
- Cook Lamb: Add lamb and cook for 3 minutes until most of it changes from red to brown, and some pieces start getting nice golden brown surfaces.
- Add Sauce: Add green onions, stir for 30 seconds (meat should all now be brown), then add Sauce. Stir and let simmer for 1 - 2 minutes until thickened.
- Serve with rice!
Recipe Notes:
- backstrap / fillet / loin (different name for same cut) - best, most expensive (I use when on sale)
- midloin chops - my most used, you need 700g/1.4lb (you lose alot in fat and bone
- chump chop and lamb rump (roast or steak) - excellent lean options, cheaper than backstrap. Handy because you can buy small roasts that are around 350g.
- cutlets - I never use, too expensive!
- lamb shoulder - excellent ribbons of fat but need to trim around sinewy bits
- leg (steak or roast) - leaner alternative to shoulder
- forequarter chops and neck - bit fatty but really great lamb flavour.
- 2 hour marinade - Rump, flank, sirloin/strip/Porterhouse (same thing), t-bone and scotch fillet/boneless rib eye.
- 24 hours - Chuck beef, gravy beef, oyster beef and other traditional stewing beef, blade, bolar blade. Only cut I do NOT recommend is brisket (doesn't seem to tenderise well)
Nutrition Information:
Stir-fry favourites
Life of Dozer
When he somehow got in but couldn’t figure out how to get out. He cried like a girl until I saved him. 🙄
Rachel says
Nagi, my dad use to make this with turkey breast but my husband dislikes turkey. Could I use chicken breast?
Nagi says
Hi Rachel – lamb is best for flavour but you can definitely make this with chicken if you like. N x
Susanna says
Have you thought about surprising your husband and making this with lamb?
Mike says
Hi Nagi, this looks lovely but I really can’t stand the texture of “velvetted” meat so could I just leave it in a bit longer to cook so it’s tender or do you think that would overcook it?
Nagi says
Hi Mike! Firstly, this isn’t crazy velveted like bad restaurants do 🙂 But if you want to skip it, that’s totally fine – use backstrap / fillet and don’t add the baking soda, and only marinate 30 min (for flavour and normal tenderising, not Chinese restaurant velveting). Reduce water down to 1/2 cup – this will make sauce reduce faster. Proceed with recipe – your sauce will thicken literally in 45 sec or so – get it off the stove stat, and serve it! N x
Mike says
Brilliant – will try that this week. thanks for the reply Nagi!
Jen says
Do you have a suggestion for the best cut of beef to substitute? Love your recipes, they have made Melb lockdown bearable!
Jen says
Oh, just read the recipe again and will look at the beef version. Looking forward to trying this. Thanks!
Nagi says
Truthfully – I just updated it 😂 If you hit refresh recently, it would be different!! N x
Jen says
Great! Thanks Nagi!
Nikita says
I can’t wait to try this recipe!! This is exactly what I have been looking for! Woo hoo!
Nagi says
I hope you love it Nikita!!! N x
alimak says
you’re a legend!!!!
Nagi says
🥰 Thanks Alimak! N x
Ian Taylor says
I remember many years ago there was a genuine Mongolian restaurant near Frankston. The menu stated that most mongolian meals were cooked on a metal shield on an open fire, all meat and veg were cut thinly to cook in less than a minute.
Nagi says
YUM! Sounds fantastic! N x
Eha Carr says
I absolutely and totally fell in love with Mongolian Lamb with the first bite I took in pre-historical times if you asked me the date. Still love, still order when in a restaurant but like making it at home. When more broke than usual have used forequarter chops but usually manage to buy the shoulder. Think our favourute recipes match but shall have yours near the wok next time very soon !!! And, yes, I often use sambal oelek also . . . Indonesian gfs pointed the way . . . Dozer ? Hmm ? You mean this is not an actor/director scenario 🙂 ?
Nagi says
Homemade is so much better Eha, I can’t wait to hear what you think of this one when you try it!!
lea edwards says
I haven’t tried this one yet, but few others I have, and they’re fantastic, thanks for sharing
Nagi says
You’re so welcome Lea! N x
Maria says
Hi Nagi is it okay if i sub the lamb for beef? Would it be okay? Thanks
Nagi says
Hi Maria, I’ve just updated the post with a beef version. Enjoy! N x
Roger Longfelliw says
Nagi, you are so unfair 😉 I am literally right in the middle of making Chicken Tetrazzini from last weeks post and now you hit me with Mongolian Lamb which I absolutely adore 😁 At least I know what’s for dinner one night this week. I’ll let you know. Cheers to you and Dozer Dog.
Nagi says
Dinner tomorrow Roger! I hope you love it! 😋 N x
Tony says
One of my absolute favourites thank you thank you Nagie. Not dropping any hints but king prawn and vegetable on the menu anytime soon ?
Nagi says
Hi Tony, I hope you try this one and love it! King prawns are on the list 😉 N x