What the recipe doesn't tell you
Ardèche highlands, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes — the slow-baked lamb shoulder and waxy potato dish of the Ardèche shepherd communities, cooked in a terracotta daubière with Boletus edulis (cèpes), tomato, and the Ardèche's own Olea europaea. The bombine is the seasonal feast preparation of the Ardèche transhumance — the shepherd communities who moved their Ovis aries flocks between the valley floor and the highland garrigues, and who cooked this dish in the farm ovens on their return. The name's etymology is debated between the Occitan bombe (round pot) and the Ardéchois dialect for 'to swell' — both refer to the terracotta pot's sealing steam. · Braised
An Ovis aries shoulder (épaule d'agneau, bone-in) is browned in Olea europaea in a terracotta daubière or heavy cast-iron pot. The shoulder is removed. Sliced Allium cepa and Allium sativum are softened in the same fat. Ripe tomato concassée is added and cooked down. Dried Boletus edulis (soaked and squeezed, soaking liquid reserved) are added to the tomato. A Roussillon or Ardèche red wine deglazes — not much, just enough to lift the base. The daubière is layered: sliced waxy potatoes (Charlotte or Roseval), the browned shoulder placed on top, surrounded by the tomato-cèpe base, the cèpe soaking liquid added, fresh thyme and bay tucked in. The pot is sealed with foil and the lid, placed in the oven at 160°C for 2.5–3 hours. The shoulder will be completely tender and beginning to pull from the bone; the potato will have absorbed the cèpe-and-lamb braising liquid.
Ardèche highlands, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes — the slow-baked lamb shoulder and waxy potato dish of the Ardèche shepherd communities, cooked in a terracotta daubière with Boletus edulis (cèpes), tomato, and the Ardèche's own Olea europaea. The bombine is the seasonal feast preparation of the Ardèche transhumance — the shepherd communities who moved their Ovis aries flocks between the valley floor and the highland garrigues, and who cooked this dish in the farm ovens on their return. The name's etymology is debated between the Occitan bombe (round pot) and the Ardéchois dialect for 'to swell' — both refer to the terracotta pot's sealing steam.
Ovis aries shoulder collagen releases into the potato bed over 3 hours. Boletus edulis adds its forest depth to the braising liquid. Tomato provides acidity and colour. The potato at service is saturated with lamb-and-cèpe braising liquid — it has become a second course as much as a vehicle for the meat. The Olea europaea of the Ardèche (a minor but genuine olive-growing region at the northern edge of the Mediterranean climate) ties the dish to the south.
Using lamb leg — it dries out. Omitting the cèpes — without them, the braising liquid lacks the umami depth that characterises the Ardèche version versus a generic Mediterranean lamb bake. Using floury potatoes — they collapse and cloud the braising liquid.
The daubière seal is essential — the steam must circulate to cook the potato and baste the shoulder from above. The cèpe soaking liquid adds exactly the forest-floor depth that makes this more than a lamb-and-potato bake. Waxy potatoes only: floury potatoes dissolve. The lamb shoulder (not leg) carries the connective tissue and fat that provides the braising body — a leg dries out in 3 hours at 160°C.
Ovis aries shoulder (épaule, bone-in) — specifically from Ardèche or Lozère transhumance-raised flocks. The Ardèche highland sheep (primarily Mérens and Causse breeds) graze on garigue herbs and produce a fat with the characteristic herb-and-lanolin note that the braising reveals over 3 hours. At Reserve tier, a named Ardèche shepherd's producer. Solanum tuberosum Charlotte or Roseval (pink-skinned, waxy) — both hold their form in the long covered bake and absorb the braising liquid correctly.
The complete professional entry for Bombine Ardéchoise: quality hierarchy, sensory tests, cross-cuisine parallels, species precision.
Read the complete technique → Why it works →