FabulousFusionFood's Roasting Recipes Home Page

A shoulder of lamb roasting on an Elizabethan-style spit (left) and in a modern oven, (right). A shoulder of lamb roasting on an Elizabethan-style spit (left) and in a modern oven, (right).
Welcome to FabulousFusionFood's Roasting Recipes Page — This is a continuation of an entire series of pages that will, I hope, allow my visitors to better navigate this site. As well as displaying recipes by name, country and region of origin I am now planning a whole series of pages where recipes can be located by meal type and main ingredient. This page gives a listing of all the roasting recipes. The technique of roasting is perhaps the oldest cooking technique. After all you can roast meat by simply placing it in the embers of a fire or on hot stones or a pit. This is why the simplest way of cooking meat is to roast it. With modern ovens roasting has become a common and complex technique and roasting can be defined as a high temperature method of cooking over a prolonged period of time where the temperature about the product being roasted is even. Roasting is an excellent method of tenderizing meat, which is why it's a common technique for cooking meat. But it also works well for vegetables, especially potatoes and other staple carbohydrate sources. Being a simple cooking technique, roasting recipes are known from every culture and every major cuisine on earth.


Roasting is a cooking method that uses dry heat where hot air covers the food, cooking it evenly on all sides with temperatures of at least 150°C from an open flame, oven, or other heat source. Roasting can enhance the flavour through caramelization and Maillard browning on the surface of the food. Roasting uses indirect, diffused heat (as in an oven), and is suitable for slower cooking of meat in a larger, whole piece.[1] Meats and most root and bulb vegetables can be roasted. Any piece of meat, especially red meat, that has been cooked in this fashion is called a roast. Meats and vegetables prepared in this way are described as being 'roasted', e.g., roast chicken or roast squash.

Before the invention and widespread use of stoves, food was primarily cooked over open flames from a hearth. To roast meat, racks with skewers, or, if accessible, complicated gear arrangements, would be utilized to turn the piece(s). In the past, this method was often associated with the upper class and special occasions, rather than customary mealtimes, because it required freshly killed meat and close attention during cooking. It was easy to ruin the meat's taste with a smoky fire or negligence to rotate it at regular intervals. Thus, elite families, who were able to afford quality meat, appointed this task to servants or invested in technology like automatic turning devices. With further technological advances, cooking came to accommodate new opportunities. By the 1860s, working families were able to afford low-priced stove models that became sufficiently available. However, the key element of observation during roasting became difficult and dangerous to do with the coal oven. Hence, traditional roasting disappeared as kitchens became no longer equipped for this custom and soon thereafter, "baking" came to be "roasting".

Roast bass. Roast fish (sea bass).
Among the earliest texts in Western Europe to include recipes for roast meats and fowl is Le Viandier (c. 1300), which includes twenty-nine recipes for various roasts, placed under the heading "Rostz de chair" (roast meats) in some manuscripts. The 1390 English Forme of Cury contains recipes for sauces for roast meats. Similar recipes under the heading 'Rost de char' also appear in Le Ménagier de Paris (1393), which also includes menus with roasts in the second and third stages of the meal.

For roasting, the food may be placed on a rack, in a roasting pan or, to ensure even application of heat, may be rotated on a spit or rotisserie. If a pan is used, the juice can be retained for use in gravy, Yorkshire pudding, etc. During oven roasting, hot air circulates around the meat, cooking all sides evenly. There are several plans for roasting meat: low-temperature cooking, high-temperature cooking, and a combination of both. Each method can be suitable, depending on the food and the tastes of the people.

For more information on how best to roast various dishes, see this site's roasting guide.


The alphabetical list of all the roasting recipes on this site follows, (limited to 100 recipes per page). There are 328 recipes in total:

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A Chinese Balloon
     Origin: Fusion
Baked Lamb with Potatoes and
Artichokes

     Origin: Ireland
Cig Oen Rhost
(Roast Lamb)
     Origin: Welsh
Abbacchio alla Cacciatora
     Origin: Italy
Baked Tandoori Whole Fish
     Origin: India
Circellos Isiciatos
(Round Sausage)
     Origin: Roman
Abbachio al Forno
(Italian Roast Baby Lamb)
     Origin: Italy
Banana and Chickpea Vegan Sheek Kebab
     Origin: Britain
Citrus Chicken
     Origin: Aruba
Achari Roast Chicken
     Origin: Pakistan
Bayrisches Bratensäuglingshwein
(Bavarian Roast Suckling Pig)
     Origin: Germany
Coca-Cola Ham
     Origin: American
Acorn Coffee
     Origin: Britain
Belizean Baked Chicken
     Origin: Belize
Cod and Vegetables en Papillote
     Origin: Britain
Ad Aves Hircosas Omni Genere
(How to Prepare 'High'
Birds of Any Kind)
     Origin: Roman
Blossom-stuffed Pork Tenderloin
     Origin: American
Coes Cig Dafad wedi Rhostio gyda
Llysiau, Mêl Grug a
Phrŵns

(Roast Leg of Mutton with Heather Honey
and Prunes)
     Origin: Welsh
Agneau Provençal au Jus Menthe
Verte

(Roast Lamb Provençal with Mint
Gravy)
     Origin: France
Bokit au Poulet
(Chicken in Fried Bread Rolls)
     Origin: Guadeloupe
Coes Oen gyda Rhosmari a Mwstad
(Roast Leg of Lamb with Rosemary and
Mustard)
     Origin: Welsh
Air Fryer Pork Roast
     Origin: Britain
Breadfruit and Saltfish Bread
     Origin: Saint Vincent
Colonial Goose
     Origin: Ireland
Air Fryer Whole Chicken or Guinea Fowl
     Origin: Britain
Bruine Bonen met Rijst
(Brown Beans with Rice)
     Origin: Suriname
Comarye
     Origin: England
Aliater ius in mullos assos
(Red Mullet in Fennel and Mint Sauce)
     Origin: Roman
Burmese grilled chicken with sticky
and crispy rice

     Origin: Myanmar
Comarye
(Roast Pork Marinated in Red Wine)
     Origin: England
Aliter assaturas
(Roast Meats, Another Way)
     Origin: Roman
Butterflied Lamb Shoulder with Salsa
Verde

     Origin: Britain
Conchiclatus Pullus vel Porcellus
(Chicken or Suckling Pig Stuffed with
Legumes)
     Origin: Roman
Aliter assaturas
(Roast Meats, Another Way)
     Origin: Roman
Callum, Libelli, Coticulae, Ungellae
(Skin, Crackling, Spare Ribs and
Trotters)
     Origin: Roman
Cornish Roast Sea Bass
     Origin: England
Aliter Avem
(Birds, Another Way)
     Origin: Roman
Camel roast
     Origin: Fusion
Cornish Under-roast
     Origin: England
Aliter Gruem vel Anatem
(Crane or Duck, Another Way)
     Origin: Roman
Canejo Asado
(Roast Rabbit)
     Origin: Colombia
Cotagrys
(Cockatrice)
     Origin: England
Aliter Haedinam sive Agninam
Excaldatam

(Roast Kid or Lamb)
     Origin: Roman
Capoun or Gos Farced
(Stuffed Capon or Goose)
     Origin: England
Cranberry-orange Marmalade Glazed Ham
     Origin: Britain
Aliter Haedum sive Agnum Assum
(Roast Kid or Lamb, Another Way)
     Origin: Roman
Capretto al Forno
(Oven-roasted Kid Goat)
     Origin: Italy
Crown Roast of Lamb
     Origin: Britain
Aliter in Apro II
(Wild Boar, Another Way II)
     Origin: Roman
Carroo Fuinnt
(Baked Carp )
     Origin: Manx
Cwnhingen wedi Stwffio
(Stuffed and Roasted Rabbit)
     Origin: Welsh
Aliter in Apro III
(Wild Boar, Another Way III)
     Origin: Roman
Cervinae Conditura
(Sauce for Venison)
     Origin: Roman
Duckling with New Peas
     Origin: Britain
Aliter In Aprum Assum Iura Ferventia
Facies Sic

(Hot Sauce for Roast Wild Boar, Another
Way)
     Origin: Roman
Château Potatoes
     Origin: France
Easter Brisket
     Origin: American
Aliter in grue vel in anate vel in
pullo

(Roast Duck with Damson Sauce)
     Origin: Roman
Châteaubriand with Portobello
Mushrooms and Madeira Wine Jus

     Origin: France
Easter Ham
     Origin: American
Aliter Isicia
(Another Sausage)
     Origin: Roman
Cha Siu
(Chinese-Surinamese roasted pork)
     Origin: Suriname
Easter Ham with Rhubarb Sauce
     Origin: Britain
Aliter Isicia II
(Another Sausage II)
     Origin: Roman
Char Siu
(Chinese Barbecued Pork)
     Origin: China
Easter Leg of Lamb with Apricots
     Origin: Britain
Aliter Ius Frigidum in Aprum Elixum
(Cold Sauce for Boiled Wild Boar,
Another Way)
     Origin: Roman
Chicken Baked with Potatoes and Garlic
     Origin: Ireland
Elleniké arnié aiga
Paschast

(Greek Easter Lamb or Kid)
     Origin: Greece
Aliter Porcellum
(Suckling Pig, Another Way)
     Origin: Roman
Chicken in a Hole
     Origin: Botswana
Extumer Lamb Roast
     Origin: Germany
Alter Haedinam Sive Agninam Excaldatam
(Steamed Lamb)
     Origin: Roman
Chicken Tikka
     Origin: India
Ffowlyn Morganwg Rhost gyda Chaws a
Pherlysiau

(Roast Glamorgan Chicken with Cheese
and Herbs)
     Origin: Welsh
Amia
(Roman Fish in Vine Leaves)
     Origin: Roman
Chickenes Endoryed
(Gilded Chicken)
     Origin: England
Fläskfilé med sås
och ugnsstekta grönsaker

(Pork Fillet with Sauce and Roast
Vegetables)
     Origin: Sweden
Aper ita conditur
(Seasoned Wild Boar)
     Origin: Roman
Chinese Roast Goose
     Origin: American
Fonnell
     Origin: England
Apple Juice Brined Turkey
     Origin: American
Chinese-spiced Goose
     Origin: Fusion
For to make pomme doryes and other
thyngs

(How to Make Golden Apples and Other
Things)
     Origin: England
Ashanti Chicken
     Origin: Ghana
Christmas Ham
     Origin: Ireland
Fricassée of Turkey
     Origin: Britain
Assaturam
(Roast Meat)
     Origin: Roman
Christmas Roast Beef
     Origin: Britain
Fried Chicken, Ital Vegetables and
Rundown Sauce

     Origin: Jamaica
Assaturas in collare
(Of Roast Neck)
     Origin: Roman
Christmas Roast Ham
     Origin: Aruba
Frontinianum Porcellum
(Suckling Pig Stewed in Wine)
     Origin: Roman
Australo-Asian Roast Pork
     Origin: Australia
Cider and Apple Brined Turkey
     Origin: Britain
Frontinianum Porcellum
(Suckling Pig à la Fronto)
     Origin: Roman
Bécassine Farcies sur des
Croûtons

(Stuffed Snipe on Croûtons)
     Origin: France
Cig Oen Cymreig â Mêl
(Honeyed Welsh Lamb)
     Origin: Welsh
Baked Haggis with Whisky Cumberland
Sauce

     Origin: Scotland
Cig Oen Cymreig Gyda Saws Mafon
(Welsh Lamb with Raspberry Sauce)
     Origin: Welsh

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