Mint-Crusted Lamb Chops with Pomegranate Butter Drizzle
Dinner party: mint-crusted lamb chops, tarragon chicken, wreath challah. To those without approaching seasonal depression, happy fall!
Nov 1, 2025
Almost like clockwork, the fall equinox happened last week and suddenly I have to film in the dark. Now nobody wants to eat on the rooftop. The air conditioning feels a little too cold. I am constantly craving apples. No longer do people come into my apartment hot and sweaty from the subway.
Don’t expect my dinner parties from this point until April to look like sun-light, golden hour little heaven scenes. We’re going for moody and lamp-lit. Try to hear the jazz noir playing in the background. I’ll do my best to not catch myself on fire with the candles burning all around my kitchen (unlikely).
If you don’t celebrate, Rosh Hashanah was last week. The Jewish new year. When we cast away the past and set ourselves up for a refreshing, exciting, and luck-filled next year. I’ll spare you the religious aspect and just focus on the food (isn’t that why we’re here?). You’re supposed to eat sweet things for the new year, hence apples dunked in honey, apple cake for dessert, brisket braised in a slightly sweet broth (most likely from coke and Heinz chili sauce…idk don’t ask me).
As you all can probably assume, I love sweet things. Rosh Hashanah dinner should be my jam (pun intended). Maybe this year I’m feeling cynical, or my sweet tooth deactivated recently, but I didn’t feel like making a dessert with dinner. Sue me! Having apples and honey at the dinner table felt sweet enough. And dunking a massive amount of homemade challah into the honey as well felt doubly sweet enough. So this is what the menu ended up looking like:
- Mint-encrusted lamb chops with pomegranate molasses drizzle
- Tarragon roast chicken breasts
- A challah wreath, or possibly a shofar, or possibly a croissaint
- Apples and honey (but I infused the honey with rosemary and Aleppo pepper)
- Radicchio salad with roast squash, fennel, and apple
- Steamed broccoli with butter
You can see how the sweetness pops up in bits and pieces but doesn’t overwhelm the menu. Much more palatable in my opinion. Like a sweet new year that doesn’t hit you over the head, one where you have to find the sweetness buried underneath the surface. A coffee with one packet of sugar, not four.
And a special note on the challah. I actually wanted it to be a ring. Rosh Hashanah challahs are supposed to be a circular loaf, but I find this form doesn’t give the dough enough room to proof and expand, resulting in denser bread. Personally, I don’t want my new year bread to be dense. So I thought a ring or wreath could be a good work around. Then I could fill the center with sliced apples as a center-piece decoration of sorts. Unfortunately, I made the crucial mistake of opting for a 6-stranded braid and didn’t have enough length to fully make a circle, which is how we ended up with a croissaint-shaped loaf (still round enough if you ask me). If you want to make an actual challah wreath, I would divide the dough just into thirds and do a normal braid, which you can loop back onto itself and bake as a circle.
Happy new year (to some) and happy fall to all,
Ryan

Hey! My name is Ryan Nordheimer. Welcome to my cooking and baking site. I’m a 25-year old home cook living in the East Village in New York City. Hopefully you enjoy my food through my own, tried-and-true recipes.
Ingredients (12)
Ingredients (12)
Instructions
Preheat oven to 425°F.
Heat a large Dutch oven or skillet over high heat. Pat your racks of lamb (2 racks) dry with paper towels and season them with 1 tsp kosher salt and black pepper.
Add the neutral oil (1 Tbsp) to the pan and once hot, add the racks of lamb (2 racks) top-side down. Press to ensure good contact. Sear for 1-2 minutes until golden-brown.
Flip over and sear the bottom side for an additional 1-2 minutes. Transfer to a cutting board.
Rub 2 tbsp Dijon mustard onto the tops of each rack. Set aside to cool.
In a food processor, add the mint (1 large bunch), garlic (4 cloves), lemon zest (1 lemon), 1/2 tsp kosher salt, and bread crumbs (1 ½ cups). Pulse to combine evenly, then stream in the olive oil (½ cup). Taste crumbs for seasoning.
Pack the crumbs onto the tops of each rack of lamb. Press well to adhere. Transfer racks to a parchment-lined baking sheet.
At this point, you can cover and refrigerate the prepped racks of lamb for a few hours.
If you have an oven thermometer, insert it into one of the racks of lamb. Bake the racks until they register 125-130F for medium rare, about 20-25 minutes.
Let rest for 5-10 minutes.
Meanwhile in a small saucepan, melt the butter (3 Tbsp) over medium heat. Once melted add the pomegranate molasses (¼ cup) and stir to combine. Season with a pinch of kosher salt. Set aside.
Cut the lamb chops between the bones (it’s ok if the topping falls off in places). Trasnfer to a serving platter and drizzle the pomegranate sauce on top.



