Greek Lamb Gyro Recipe

4.80 from 20 votes

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Making delicious Lamb Gyro at home is easy! Season the lamb, cook until tender, slice thinly and serve with pita bread, a traditional Greek Horiatiki salad and my Lemon Potatoes or my mum’s popular Greek Potato Salad.

Table laid out Greek lamb gyros pita

Post sponsored by PGI Welsh Lamb

It must be that time of year… the time I wish I was on holiday in Greece! Despite our exceptionally hot summer, I am still longing to be on a Greek island, swimming daily and enjoying my favorite Greek (guilty) pleasure – GYROS!

But since our holiday is still a few weeks away – not that I am counting the days or anything – I have recreated the Greek gyros experience at home!

What is Gyros?

Gyros, pronounced YEE-ros, is a meat dish cooked on a tall vertical rotisserie which rotates slowly in front of an electric grill  – gyros means ‘turn’ in Greek. 

You can find gyros in any fast food joint that also sells souvlaki and you would be forgiven for thinking the two are interchangeable. In fact ‘souvlaki’, like gyros, refers to the cooking method, meat cooked on a skewer – souvlaki translates as ‘little skewer’.

A kitchen scene showcases two vertical rotisserie spits with seasoned meat, as a succulent lamb gyro rotates on the larger spit in the foreground. The smaller one spins in the background, both sizzling and cooking perfectly near an open flame.

Both souvlaki and gyros are usually served on pita bread spread with tzatziki, sliced tomatoes, onions and occasionally fries or fried halloumi. The pita is wrapped to encase the filings and  there you have it, Greece’s favorite street food to eat on the go. 

Wrapped gyros pita

What type of meat?

In Greece, gyros is traditionally made with pork, although chicken gyros is also becoming popular (take a look at my Chicken Gyro Recipe). Occasionally you will also find lamb and beef gyros. In the US gyros is made with a mixture of ground beef and lamb.

The meat is first seasoned with spices, salt and pepper and marinated in vinegar and olive oil. It is then threaded on a large skewer building up a gyro ‘cone’ which is then cooked on an upright rotisserie. 

The gyro is the shaved with an electric knife before being served on pita with all the trimmings. You can also order gyro ‘merida’ (portion) served with salad and fries if you are so inclined. I am frequently inclined, when in Greece 😉

A child with short dark hair and a straw hat is holding a pita wrap filled with fries, onions, and other ingredients for a classic lamb gyro. They are wearing a blue shirt and sitting at an outdoor table, smiling at the camera.

Gyros Seasoning

The spices used to marinate gyros are salt, pepper, sweet paprika and lots of Greek dried oregano (rigani). It’s well worth sourcing Greek oregano if you can as it is much more aromatic.

I have used the same seasoning in this recipe and the taste is pretty authentic, even if the cooking method different, vertical rotisseries being a little hard to come by at home!

Platter of Greek lamb gyros

How to make Greek Lamb Gyro

Full measurements and instructions can be found on the printable recipe card at the bottom of the page. Please take a look at the steps and video before attempting this recipe!

MARINATE THE LAMB

  1. Mix oregano, sweet paprika, garlic granules, salt and pepper together in a bowl. Rub this seasoning all over your shoulder of lamb. Add olive oil and vinegar and coat the lamb. Cover and marinate for at least an hour.
  2. Preheat the oven to 170C / 325 F and set a shelf on the lower third of the oven. Cook the lamb for an hour covered with foil. Remove the foil and cook for a further 20 minutes.
Marinating shoulder of lamb for Greek gyros

REST THE LAMB

  1. Cover loosely with foil and leave to rest for 30 minutes. The lamb is cooked when the internal temperature is 70°C (158°F) for medium-well done. Best way to check is with a digital thermometer*.
  2. Slice the lamb thinly, removing any fatty bits. Add a few tablespoons of the pan juices to the sliced lamb. Keep warm.
slicing lamb gyro

Assemble the gyros pita

  1. Finely slice one red onion (with a mandolin* if you have one) and mix with generous amount of chopped parsley. Finely slice two large tomatoes, discarding the seeds. 
  2. Spread your warm pita with the yogurt sauce. Add a generous amount of lamb and then top with the tomatoes and onions. Wrap the pita around the fillings and eat immediately!
Making Greek lamb gyros pita

Recipe Tips

This recipe has three distinct parts: the lamb gyros, the homemade pita (or pitta – can never decide which spelling is right), and finally the yogurt sauce which I have used here instead of the more traditional tzatziki. 

Make the yogurt sauce first as it can be chilling in the fridge while you get on with the rest. Start marinating the lamb (1h) then cook (1 h 20m). Start making the pita (1h rising time) when the lamb goes in the oven.

Roll out the pita and get it ready to pan fry. Lamb comes out of the oven and rests (30m) while you pan fry the pita. Slice the lamb, tomatoes and onion and you are ready to serve.

Platter of Greek lamb gyros

This recipe serves a family of four, making six pitas and enough lamb for everyone, even if the adults have two servings. If you are serving a crowd, use a whole lamb shoulder and double the pita recipe – or use my two ingredient flatbread recipe which doesn’t contain yeast and is much much easier 🙂



Hope you have enjoyed my Lamb Gyro Recipe! Find me on Facebook, or share a photo of your meal on Instagram, or save it to Pinterest with the tag #supergoldenbakes. I can’t wait to see your take on it!

4.80 from 20 votes

Greek lamb gyros with pita

Take a bite of this delicious lamb gyros served on pita bread with garlicky yogurt sauce, tomatoes and onions and pretend you are on a Greek holiday…
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 1 hour 20 minutes
Resting time: 1 hour
Total Time: 1 hour 40 minutes
Servings: 4 people
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Video

Ingredients

For the tahini yogurt dipping sauce

  • 200 g (7oz) Greek yogurt
  • 2 tbsp tahini stir before using
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • juice of ½ lemon
  • 2 tbsp chopped parsley
  • 1 garlic clove minced
  • 1 tsp salt or to taste

For the pita

  • 300 g (2 ½ cups) bread flour plus more to dust
  • 1 tbsp sugar
  • 1 tsp dry active yeast
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 130 g (scant 1 cup) Greek yogurt
  • 120 ml (½ cup) water
  • 3 tbsp olive oil plus more to fry

For the lamb

  • 1 kg (2 lb 2oz) half shoulder of lamb
  • 1 tbsp oregano
  • 1 tbsp onion granules
  • ½ tbsp sweet paprika
  • 1 tsp salt
  • ½ tsp ground black pepper
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 2 tbsp white wine vinegar

To serve

  • 2 large tomatoes sliced thinly
  • 1 red onion sliced very thinly
  • 2 tbsp chopped parsley

Instructions 

Make the tahini yoghurt sauce

  • Mix yogurt, tahini, olive oil, lemon juice, minced garlic, salt and chopped parsley together in a bowl. Cover and keep in the fridge until needed.
    200 g (7oz) Greek yogurt, 2 tbsp tahini, 2 tbsp olive oil, juice of ½ lemon, 2 tbsp chopped parsley, 1 garlic clove minced, 1 tsp salt or to taste

Make the homemade pita

  • Put the flour, sugar, yeast and salt in a bowl (or your stand mixer fitted with the dough hook).
    300 g (2 ½ cups) bread flour , 1 tbsp sugar, 1 tsp dry active yeast, 1 tsp salt
  • Add the water, yogurt and olive oil. Mix together with a spoon and once the dough comes together use your hands to lightly knead in the bowl until well combined. Cover the bowl and leave the dough to rise for an hour – it won’t rise significantly.
    130 g (scant 1 cup) Greek yogurt, 120 ml (½ cup) water, 3 tbsp olive oil plus more to fry
  • Tip the dough onto a well-floured tabletop. Briefly knead and form into a log. Cut into six equal portions. Keep any dough you are not using covered with a damp cloth.
  • Roll each portion out, adding more flour if the dough is sticky. Keep the pitas separated by parchment paper and covered with a damp cloth once rolled out.
  • Heat a large non-stick frying pan and wipe with a little olive oil. Cook the pita over high heat, for a couple of minutes per side until nicely colored. Keep warm or pan fry/grill to reheat before serving.

Preparing and cooking the lamb

  • Mix oregano, sweet paprika, garlic granules, salt and pepper together in a bowl. Rub this seasoning all over your shoulder of lamb. Add olive oil and vinegar and coat the lamb. Cover and marinate for at least an hour.
    1 tbsp oregano, 1 tbsp onion granules, ½ tbsp sweet paprika, 1 tsp salt, ½ tsp ground black pepper, 2 tbsp olive oil, 2 tbsp white wine vinegar, 1 kg (2 lb 2oz) half shoulder of lamb
  • Preheat the oven to 170C / 325 F. Set a shelf on the lower third of the oven.
  • Cook the lamb for an hour covered with foil. Remove the foil and cook for a further 20 minutes. Cover loosely with foil and leave to rest for 30 minutes. The lamb is cooked when the internal temperature is 70°C (158°F) for medium-well done.
  • Slice the lamb thinly, removing any fatty bits. Add a few tablespoons of the pan juices to the sliced lamb. Keep warm.

Assemble the gyros pita

  • Finely slice one red onion and mix with generous amount of chopped parsley. Finely slice two large tomatoes, discarding the seeds.
  • Spread your warm pita with the yogurt sauce. Add a generous amount of lamb and then top with the tomatoes and onions. Wrap the pita around the fillings and eat immediately!
    2 large tomatoes, 1 red onion sliced very thinly, 2 tbsp chopped parsley

Notes

  • Make the yogurt sauce first as it can be chilling in the fridge while you get on with the rest. Start marinating the lamb (1h) then cook (1 h 20m). When lamb goes in the oven starting making the pita (1h rising time) then roll out the pita and get it ready to pan fry. Lamb comes out of the oven and rests (30m) while you pan fry the pita. Slice the lamb, tomatoes and onion and you are ready to serve.
  • Recipe makes 6 pitas – enough for the amount of lamb specified. Double the recipe if making a 2 kg (4lb) whole lamb shoulder.

Nutrition

Calories: 742kcal | Carbohydrates: 76g | Protein: 46g | Fat: 28g | Saturated Fat: 7g | Cholesterol: 112mg | Sodium: 1334mg | Potassium: 944mg | Fiber: 5g | Sugar: 9g | Vitamin A: 1383IU | Vitamin C: 15mg | Calcium: 179mg | Iron: 8mg

Nutritional information is always approximate, and will depend on quality of ingredients and serving sizes.

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4.80 from 20 votes (11 ratings without comment)

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31 Comments

  1. Adele says:

    Is it traditional not to have any type of lettuce gyros?

    1. Lucy Parissi says:

      You can add some if you like, they do in Greece

  2. Emily says:

    5 stars
    Have made this and the pork gyros, both amazing, the pitta is also fantastic. Is there any way to pre cook the pitta, and keep soft and then warm them up later in the day?

    1. Lucy Parissi says:

      Hi Emily, thanks for your comment. You can prepare the pita bread, freeze it then pan fry again. If you are using it on the same day then a quick pan fry should work.

  3. JZ says:

    5 stars
    Made these Gyro’s for the first time last night for dinner…my husband said “keep this recipe, they’re good”…need I say more? FYI: I used Lamb Chops instead of shoulder…they worked great and cheaper for just the two of us.

    1. Kandyce says:

      Did you marinate the chops whole, then cool and then cut into strips ? Thank you 😊

      1. Lucy Parissi says:

        Yes although it is lamb shoulder, not chops. The recipe card has detailed instructions (scroll to bottom of post)

  4. Pamela says:

    5 stars
    I love everything about this recipe and have been having a Gyro craving.
    Luckily I have a beautiful lamb shoulder in the freezer will thaw it and will make using your wonderful recipe! Thanks for sharing

  5. Hussain says:

    How much flour, yeast, sugar is needed to make the pitas?
    Can’t wait to try this out!

    Thanks for sharing!

  6. kristal says:

    Hi Lucy,

    I was just wondering i have half a leg of lamb in the freezer could i use that instead? And would the cook time be the same. Kristal

    1. Lucy Parissi says:

      You would need to defrost it first but yes same

  7. Brad says:

    5 stars
    Not sure if anyone who rated this recipe cooked it, but I sure did. And every one of these 5-star ratings is on the mark. The only change I did was BBQ this in the Weber (still kept to about 170C). The 30 mins of resting is vital to help it re-absorb maximum juices – you don’t want any of this deliciousness kept in the tray. And those pitas.. WOW!! Super soft and pliable, yet perfect for holding all the fillings you can pack into it. These are now my go-to when soft flat breads are needed.

    We did all the extras for this recipe, and i also added a hommus (because why not?). And lemon – don’t forget the lemon!

    1. Lucy Parissi says:

      Thanks for your lovely comment so glad you enjoyed it!

  8. Shik says:

    Hi recipe looks great. Can’t wait to try it. Can I ask what temperature to set the oven to please for the lamb? Many thanks

    1. Lucy Parissi says:

      I have updated the recipe – it should be 170C (235F) but always best to check internal temperature with a digital thermometer as oven temperatures can vary.

      1. Shik Shire says:

        Great thanks very much! Can’t wait to give it a try!