When you marinate a butterflied lamb leg in a bold garlic/lemon/oregano Greek marinade, very good things will happen … Specifically, amazingly tender, seriously flavour-infused lamb! Excellent to grill on the BBQ, or roast in the oven.
A sensational share platter meal option for gatherings – the Greek way! After more ideas? Browse all my roast lamb recipes!

Close up of Greek Butterflied Lamb Leg
Butterflied lamb leg is simply a leg of lamb with the bone removed so the meat lies flat and is relatively uniform in thickness. This means the lamb cooks faster than a traditional whole roast leg, as well as opening the leg up to all sorts of flavour possibilities.
Today, we’re going Greek! Lots of garlic, lots of lemon, lots of oregano – flavours that are a natural pairing with lamb given it’s one of Greece’s favourite meats!

Greek Butterflied Lamb Leg on a platter, ready to be shared
Just garlic, oregano, lemons, the butterflied lamb leg (more on this below), and pretty please can we also pretend I didn’t forget to put olive oil in the photo? 🙂 Oil is necessary not only to add some richness and flavour, but also to dilute the lemon so the acid in the lemon doesn’t “cook” the lamb meat, like you see it done for Ceviche.

Olive oil is missing from the photo! Oops. 🙂
Butterflied lamb leg is a lamb leg with the bone removed so it can be “butterflied” to lie flat. This gives you a broader range of cooking method options compared to a bone in lamb leg which is easiest roasted whole due to its shape. It also affords us the opportunity to really get some great flavours in all the way through the flesh.
When prepared well and cooked to rare or medium rare, it’s an incredibly succulent, tender lamb cut that’s ideal served for gatherings. A 1.7kg/3.4lb butterflied lamb leg (the meat cut from an average size 2.2kg / 4.4 lb bone-in lamb leg) will easily serve 8 people, if not more.

Butterflied lamb leg with some of the fat trimmed off it. One of the best parts of the lamb to BBQ!
The outer surface, pictured above, will typically come with a layer of fat on it. Trim off as much or as little as you want – though I do caution against excessive fat removal because the fat keeps the meat nice and juicy, not to mention fat = flavour!
And here’s what the flesh side looks like. This is the side that the bone was cut out of:

Some people might see scrappy flesh. All I see are cracks and crevices, waiting to absorb the flavour of the marinade!
If time permits, I recommend marinating for 24 hours. This yields more tender meat, and better flavour infusion.
However, the beauty of using butterflied lamb leg with this rather intense lemony-garlicky marinade is that even a short 3 hour marination makes a remarkable difference. All those nooks, crannies and crevices in the flesh that you can see in the photo above are just waiting for the marinade to seep into!😂
Note: The surface of the flesh will turn a bit white, from the lemon “cooking” the meat. Don’t be alarmed – it’s supposed to happen and has no effect on the final result. 🙂

Marinade for 24 hours for best results. But even 3 hours works astonishingly well!
Because the lamb leg meat is “butterflied” out so it lays relatively flat, it makes it perfect for cooking on the BBQ, which you can’t really do with a bone in lamb leg. Lamb LOVES to be grilled, and it really brings out the best of those tasty Greek flavours!
Having said that, your good ol’ oven will do a sensational job too. In fact, while the Butterflied Lamb Leg you see in the video is grilled, the one in the photos was seared on the stove then finished in the oven (to finish cooking it through more evenly).

How to make Greek Butterflied Lamb Leg

Greek Butterflied Lamb Leg fresh off the BBQ

Close up of pink juicy slices of Greek Butterflied Lamb Leg
KEY TIP! Pull the lamb off the BBQ/oven before the target internal temperature is reached because it will rise by around 5°C/7°F as it rests. If you don’t pull the lamb off/out early, the lamb will be overdone by the time it’s rested – and how sad will that be?! 😞
| Doneness | Pull Temperature* | Target Temp after resting ** |
|---|---|---|
| Rare (dark pink) | 49°C / 120°F | 54°C / 129°F |
| Medium-rare (recommended, blushing pink) | 57°C / 135°F | 62°C / 144°F |
| Medium (hint of pink inside) | 63°C / 145°F | 68°C / 154°F |
| Well done (least juicy, no pink at all) | 67°C / 153°F | 72°C / 162°F |
* Pull temperature is the internal temperature at which the lamb should be taken off the BBQ or out of the oven. ** This is what the internal temperature will rise to after resting, and this is your final Target Temperature for your desired level of doneness.
The reality is, because of the uneven thickness of a butterflied leg of lamb, while most of it can be a perfect medium rare, the thinner edges will be unavoidably medium or even medium-well done. But that actually works perfectly to cater for guests who prefer their lamb more well-cooked!

Greek Butterflied Lamb Leg platter

Greek Butterflied Lamb Leg stuffed in pita bread
This dish is fabulous for gatherings, shared platter-style, or a quick summer meal that will feed your family over a couple of nights. Here are some serving options and suggested sides:
The platter pictured in this post features the Greek Salad, store-bought flatbreads (you can do better!) and Tzatziki.
Enjoy! – Nagi x

Author: Nagi
Prep: 5
Cook: 25
Marinating: 1
BBQ/Grilling, Mains
Greek
4.94 from 32 votes
Servings 8 + people
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Recipe video above. This is a terrific, bold Greek marinade for lamb that both tenderises and infuses it with garlicky, herby, lemon flavours.
Butterflied lamb leg is a fantastic way to enjoy lamb because the flattened shape means it can be cooked relatively quickly compared to roasting a whole leg. In fact, I think that butterflied lamb leg is one of the best cuts of lamb for the BBQ!
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1. Butterflied lamb leg – This is a lamb leg with the bone removed. I buy mine already butterflied. Otherwise, ask your butcher to bone out a whole lamb leg or do it yourself (use a boning or long, skinny knife and take your time; it’s not too difficult.)
2. Stove/Oven – Don’t try to cook the lamb all the way through on the stove, you’ll end up with a thick band over overcooked lamb before the inside cooks. Needs to be seared on the stove then finished in the oven.
3. Internal temperature cooked lamb:

Butterflied Lamb Leg Internal Temperature Cooked
TIP for even cooking: Butterflied lamb leg is not perfectly even in thickness all the way through. The thinner parts will be more done than the thickest parts, but this usually works out well because there’s always someone around that likes their meat more well done! However, if you really want every part to be perfectly medium rare, just cut the thinner parts off the heat earlier. It tends to be the flappy ends so they will detach easily!
4. Nutrition per serving, assuming 8 servings and that 3 tbsp of the oil ends up in the finished dish. Excludes sides.
Serving: 187gCalories: 430cal (22%)Protein: 37g (74%)Fat: 23g (35%)Saturated Fat: 9.5g (59%)Polyunsaturated Fat: 1.6gMonounsaturated Fat: 9.9gCholesterol: 168.3mg (56%)Sodium: 411mg (18%)Potassium: 606.6mg (17%)Calcium: 18.7mg (2%)Iron: 3.7mg (21%)
Keywords: BBQ lamb leg, butterflied lamb leg, Greek lamb
Another kind of leg. No doubt the other half of him is up to no good…..

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