Classroom lesson 路 Food馃嚛馃嚳 Algeria

Mechoui - slow-roasted lamb

A whole lamb cooked over wood for hours at celebrations

A whole lamb being slowly roasted over hot coals at an Algerian celebration

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Mechoui is the traditional Algerian way of slow-roasting a whole lamb over a wood fire. It is the food of big celebrations - weddings, family reunions and important festivals. The lamb cooks for hours until the meat is so tender it falls off the bone, and the smell drifts across the whole neighbourhood.

Tell me more

The word 'mechoui' comes from Arabic and just means 'roasted'. The lamb is seasoned with simple ingredients - butter, salt, cumin, garlic and sometimes saffron - and then turned slowly over the fire for three or four hours. The cook keeps brushing it with butter so it stays juicy and the skin turns golden and crispy.

Different regions cook mechoui in different ways. In some parts of Algeria, the lamb is roasted on a spit over an open fire. In others, it is cooked underground - in a clay-lined pit with hot coals - which makes the meat soft and smoky. The underground way is sometimes called 'mechoui m'tamen' - 'buried mechoui'.

Mechoui is a sharing meal. The cooked lamb is placed on a giant platter in the middle of a big table or on a rug spread on the ground. Everyone sits around it and pulls off pieces of meat with their hands, usually dipping them in cumin and salt. There is no cutlery and no rush.

Mechoui is a marker of a special day. If you are invited to a wedding or family party in Algeria and you smell wood smoke as you walk up to the house, you can be almost sure there is a mechoui being cooked. People remember big celebrations by the mechoui that was served.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might a meal that takes hours to cook feel different from a 20-minute one?
  2. 02What food does your family make for the biggest celebrations?
  3. 03Eating with your hands isn't allowed everywhere - what foods do you eat with your hands at home?
Try this

Classroom activity

Plan a class celebration meal: write a menu of foods that take 'all day' to prepare in different cultures. Examples could be Algerian mechoui, Sunday roast, Argentine asado, Japanese mochi-pounding. Discuss: what makes a 'special day' meal special?