Kofta skewers, beloved throughout the Middle East and South Asia, get a fiery twist in this English-loving recipe that marries the heat of shatta—a bold, fresh chili sauce—with the iconic, juicy grilled flavor of lamb kofta. The recipe draws deeply from Levantine culinary roots but is fully adapted for a British garden barbecue, cocktail soirée, or any home cook wanting to expand their spice horizons.
Shatta is a tantalizing Palestinian condiment made from fresh red (or green) chilies, olive oil, lemon, and garlic, coarsely pounded into a piquant sauce. Used everywhere from breakfast to barbecue, shatta adds a wallop of vibrant heat and citrus to lamb, lifting its game playfully compared to the classic kofta. Here, we work shatta directly into the meat mixture rather than simply serving alongside, resulting in all-over flavor, not simply heat on the palate’s surface.
If you can’t find branded shatta (often in Middle Eastern groceries), it’s easy to make: blend fresh chilies, a few garlic cloves, salt, olive oil, a squeeze of lemon, and optional tomato paste if lingering sweetness is desired. Let it ferment/classroom a day for depth—though in a pinch, you can use fresh red chili mashed with olive oil.
Combining Middle Eastern flavors with ingredients common to British supermarkets, this dish exemplifies culinary fusion, blending heritage and innovation. British lamb is famed for its flavor, and skewering transforms it—cooking evenly, quickly, and picking up great smoky char lines that flat cooking can’t deliver. The fresh hit of shatta and mint yogurt is both daring and refreshing—a high-wire act of fire and cool that keeps every bite interesting.
Think bright: Serve atop charred flatbreads, with crispy roast potatoes, a piled-high zesty slaw, or simply with couscous and pickles. They’re stellar finger food, great for passed trays, and even cold leftovers invigorate lunchtime salads. Don’t forget the lemon—it wakes the entire platter!
Though variations exist all over the Middle East, from Egyptian kofta balls to Turkish kofte skewers, kofta originates from the Persian word 'kuftan', meaning 'to pound'. This reflects the old methodology of pounding or mincing meat by hand with spices before extrusion into myriad shapes—flattened ovals in Iran, tubes in Syria, or balls in India. Using shatta sauce amplifies not only heat, but a sense of national pride from Palestinian tables. By integrating shatta within the kofta rather than simply on top, this recipe gives a starring role to contemporary Arab flavor blends for wider English palates.
The Spicy Shatta Lamb Kofta Skewers reflect a new age for cooking: celebrating migration, tradition, and innovation in every mouthful. You get deep, lamby savoriness punctuated by spice, citrusy zip, and grilled perfume. Off the skewer, onto bread, or atop salads, they’re dangerously crowd-pleasing and impossible not to revisit throughout the summer.
The beauty: this kofta scales effortlessly for crowds (just multiply ingredients), freezes well both raw and cooked, and is as joyful over cast iron indoors in winter as it is alongside smoky coals in June. Elevate the ordinary grill session—you won’t be disappointed!