Summertime in the backyard is made for a big, delicious dinner spent with family and friends. But who wants to turn the oven on in July? I try my hardest not to turn the oven on at all between Memorial Day and Labor Day. If I can cater a big meal to the whole neighborhood in the backyard on a warm summertime evening, even better.
Lamb Kababs with All the Fixings — Because you can’t barbecue every summertime day
Let me just say this upfront: this is hands-down one of the best Mediterranean lamb kabab recipe situations you can throw at a summer evening, no matter where in the country you are with friends and family this Memorial Day weekend.
Why? Because we are not turning on the oven. We are not sweating like we’re slow-roasting ourselves. We are going full outdoor, barbecue, but make it ethnic.
You form the kabobs, throw them on the grill, and let the magic happen. Meanwhile, your lemon rice is quietly doing its thing in the rice cooker like a well-behaved child, a 40-year-old that doesn’t raise your electricity bill or your blood pressure. Not that I’m tagging anyone.
This is what I call a functional summertime dinner idea.
Now, while I’m out here living my Mediterranean fantasy, my hair is currently falling out in clumps thanks to some very glamorous medication. My boyfriend—clearly not fearing for his life—goes, “Well, a bald food blogger would leave less hair in the food.”
Excuse me, sir. If you don’t occasionally find a strand of hair in your meal… is it even organic?
Lamb Kababs, and 12 Side Dishes, because sometimes this foodie gets carried away
Don’t forget the Bollywood Lemon Rice!
Now look—this meal has more steps than your fitness tracker on a Big Bear hike. BUT. Most of it can be prepped early in the afternoon while you’re still properly caffeinated.
Then at dinnertime:
Grill the kabobs
Turn on the rice cooker
Assemble your sides
Bing. Bang. Boom. Mediterranean Lamb Kabab Feast.
This is also why I love this for groups. You can lay everything out in big, gorgeous platters and suddenly you look like the kind of person who “entertains,” instead of someone who panic-cooked three things at once while drinking wine.
If you’re feeding a crowd and don’t feel like taking out a small loan for ground lamb:
Swap in ground chicken → still delicious, way cheaper
Replace cashews with peanuts → no one will complain, they’ll be too busy stuffing their faces
Saffron threads… okay, yes, they’re boujie, but you can skip or sub if needed
We are going for flavor, not financial ruin.
That old Persian Parsley Drama (Yes, It Matters)
Now let’s talk parsley, because this is where people get unnecessarily confused.
Curly Parsley
Slightly more grassy, fresh flavor
Better for raw applications like dressings and salads
Has that “I’m trying to be fancy” texture
Flat-Leaf (Italian) Parsley
More peppery and smooth
Blends better into cooked dishes
Now personally? I actually like curly parsley in this salad because it adds texture and a little bite. But honestly—use what you have. This is not a Michelin inspection. No one from Parsley Headquarters is coming to arrest you.
The Onion Situation (Or you don’t have to destroy your eye makeup)
Now we need to talk about grating onions… because this is where things get personal. When you grate an onion, it releases this delightful little chemical called syn-propanethial-S-oxide.
Sounds fancy, right? No. It’s basically a gas designed to ruin your life and your mascara.
This is the same moment where:
Your eyes start burning
Your makeup starts melting
The dog is wondering why you are crying in the kitchen
So here’s my professional advice:
👉 Wear sunglasses while grating the onion I am not joking. You will look ridiculous, but you will also be able to see.
👉 Do NOT do your makeup first Unless your goal is “smoky eye meets emotional breakdown.”
And honestly—how do Persian girls always have flawless eyeliner during this step? What is this sorcery? Are they immune? Were they born into this?
Because the rest of us are standing there like:
“Why am I crying? I chose this. This was voluntary.”
Bonus Myth (Because Aunties Love Advice)
Some people say, “Put a matchstick between your teeth.” Excuse me—what? Now I’m sobbing, holding a cheese grater, and chewing on a matchstick like I’m in some kind of low-budget cooking survival show. Do I do it anyway? Yes. Does it work? That is as debatable as Steve Hilton Vs. Chad Bianco for California Governor.
Do onion enzymes still attack me when I least expect it?
Every. Single. Time.
Summer Cooking for People Who Don’t Want Their House Feeling Like Delhi in May
Do you own a rice cooker yet?Because I absolutely adore making this easy Bollywood Lemon Rice in mine, especially during summertime when the last thing I want is my cabin kitchen turning into the surface of the sun. Toss everything into the rice cooker, walk away, and suddenly you look like the kind of organized domestic goddess who has her life together. If you don’t own a rice cooker yet, honey, your kitchen is practically filing a formal complaint.
Need to buy saffron for that delicious, authentic Bollywood Lemon Rice? This is the very best saffronI have personally found.
Final Thoughts Before You Fire Up the Grill
This Mediterranean lamb kabab recipe is everything you want in a summer meal:
Flavor-packed
Grill-friendly
Impressive without being insane
Flexible for budgets and crowds
And most importantly—it lets you stand outside, drink something cold, and pretend your life is together while your rice cooker quietly handles the hard part. Which, honestly, is the kind of support we all need right now.
Full Turkish Lamb Dinner — Because Store-Bought Hummus Is What My Brother Brings
For the Lamb Kabobs
1/2 pound of ground lamb
1 small yellow onion, grated, and water squeezed out
Store-bought Baba Ghanoush (I know, I know, I mocked store-bought, but Whole Foods has a really good one)
Mediterranean Lemon Parsley Salsa
1 cup fresh curled parsley
1/2 of a white onion
1/2 cup good-quality red tomatoes, chopped
1/2 a lemon
a sprinkle of sumac
1/2 teaspoon of salt
1/2 a teaspoon of pepper
Mix your spices, onions, garlic, tomato paste and the lamb together. You can do this a few hours ahead of time to make assembling this dish easier before dinnertime. I usually mix up the Lamb kabobs and the Mediterranean Lemon Parsley Salsa in the afternoon and leave both in the fridge until I’m ready to start cooking.
When you are ready to bake those kabobs, preheat the oven to 400. Bake those kabobs for 15 minutes. Turn the oven to broil high. Broil 8 minutes.