The Ultimate South African Guide to Spit Braai Mastery: How to Cook a Whole Lamb Like a Legend
Listen here, boet. A proper spit braai isn’t just about throwing a sheep on a pole and hoping for the best. It’s a proudly South African tradition that brings family and friends together for something special. Were here to give you the full breakdown—no shortcuts, no guesswork—just honest advice that works whether you’ve got basic gear or the full deluxe setup.
By the time we’re done, you’ll know exactly how to get that lamb cooked right through, falling off the bone, with juice flowing and a crackly layer that’ll have everyone coming back for seconds.

Part I: Essential Gear and Selecting Your Lamb
Your Spit Setup
You don’t need the fanciest equipment to start, but you need the basics. You can light your fire straight on the ground, but a fire drum saves the lawn when you’re at someone else’s place—and trust me, your host will appreciate it.
Basic setup includes:
- Main pole with rubber coupling
- Tongs or spike prongs (two-spike prongs for front and back shoulders)
- Leg brackets to hold the legs in place (stops them flopping around during the cook)
- Wooden blocks on the stands (oil these throughout cooking)
- Fire drum positioned underneath
- Extension lead for electric motor setups
A proper motorized setup includes an electric motor driving a worm gear to a right angle gearbox, connected via a rubber coupling to your main pole. Before you even think about the lamb, run your spit to make sure it’s not “walking” (wandering off the coupling).
Choosing Your Lamb: Rule Number One
You have to have a sheep to have a spit braai. Get yourself a beautiful one-year-old lamb (or just under), nice and fat. For smaller gatherings, aim for around 13-14 kg. For bigger crowds, go up to a 20-25 kg lamb. Look for a Grade A sheep—not too fatty so the ladies will like it, but with enough fat on the rib area so the okes are happy too.
Essential Tools and Ingredients
Hardware:
- Stainless steel wire (strong, heat-resistant, sharp at both ends)
- Wire pliers
- Sharp knives
- Gimbal or bolt for twitching
- Small piece of untreated hardwood (for backbone protection—never use chemically treated timber near food)
- Long heat-resistant gloves (non-negotiable for safety)
- Counterbalance weight (critical for even cooking)
Ingredients:
- Olive oil (plenty of it)
- Quality salt (kosher salt or coarse sea salt)
- Fresh garlic (whole bulbs)
- Fresh rosemary
- Black pepper
- Quality braai spices (Long Cloud Barbecue, Robertson’s Master Blends, or Nyama Braai salt)
- Optional: Lemons, fresh mint, onions, cumin, oregano
Part II: Preparing Your Lamb—Get This Right
Step 1: Wash It Down Properly
This is where most people start wrong. Before any seasoning touches that meat:
- Wash the whole animal thoroughly—inside and outside
- Rub it all down to remove dirt, grime, and any hair
- Some braai masters do a lemon bath: rub half lemons all over the inside and outside before any other prep
- Drain it well
Step 2: Mounting the Animal
Place the lamb on the pole back end first. Feed your skewer through the front and back of the animal.
Install prongs/tongs:
- Bottom tongs go through the back legs
- Top tongs go through the front shoulders (avoid the bone when pushing them in)
- Make sure they’re nice and tight
Install leg brackets:
- Modern leg brackets have grooves that the legs sit into
- Just slide them onto the skewer and hook the legs in—they won’t fall out during cooking
- If you don’t have fancy leg brackets, tie the legs with wire to keep them from flopping
Step 3: Backbone Protection (Critical)
This is where most people stuff it up. You have two options:
Basic Method (Timber and Wire):
- Place a small piece of untreated hardwood over the backbone (never use treated or impregnated timber—chemicals have no place near your food)
- This stops the wire cutting through while the animal spins
- Run wire over the timber, down through the cavity, around the pole, then twitch it tight underneath using your gimbal
- Do this twice: one tie about a third of the way back, another a third of the way forward
- Twist until you can’t twist anymore—make it solid
Advanced Method (Deluxe Back Brace):
- Push the back brace (with spikes) through the meat from underneath
- Feed your skewer through the hole in the back brace
- Place the plate on top and tighten with wing nuts
- Important: Don’t overtighten—as the animal cooks, the spine weakens and can snap
Step 4: Neck and Legs
Neck: Tie it down tight to the leg bracket with stainless steel wire. It should be solid as a rock.
Back legs:
- Wrap wire around one leg, down to the pole, pull tight
- Then back up to the other leg and pull tight
- Apply good tension with your gimbal—you might need a second twitch
- Don’t pull them right back, just get good tension on them
Step 5: Stitching the Belly
Safety first with stainless steel wire:
- It can flick up—watch your eyes
- Sharp ends—watch your fingers
- This is why you wear gloves
The cross-stitch technique:
- Start from the back, work your way to the front
- Get into really meaty parts—not close to the edge or stitches can break
- Leave a bit of wire at the start to tie it off
- Wrap the first stitch a couple times to make it tight
- Run the wire up from back to front
- Cross-stitch back and tie it off
- If you’ve got extra wire, use it elsewhere
Cut the front hocks off, then stitch the front legs together using wire loops and your gimbal for a tight twitch.
When you’re done, that lamb should be rock solid and immovable.
Part III: Flavor Layering—Multiple Techniques
South African braai masters use different approaches. Here are the proven methods:
Method 1: Dry Rub (Traditional)
Basic seasoning mix:
- Salt (generous—kosher or coarse sea salt)
- Black pepper
- Cumin
- Oregano
- Quality braai spice (Robertson’s Master Blends Rosemary & Garlic, Long Cloud Barbecue rubs)
Rub olive oil all over first (helps it stick), then apply your dry rub liberally inside and outside. Don’t be shy—excess salt rolls off during cooking and becomes part of the magic.
Method 2: Injection Method
Some braai masters inject their marinade directly into the meat before cooking:
- Prepare your sauce/marinade
- Use a meat injector
- Inject into thick parts (shoulders, legs)
- Turn the animal and inject the other side
Method 3: Overnight Wet Marinade
For next-level flavor, prepare this the night before:
- 1 part water
- ½ part fresh lemon juice
- Finely chopped garlic cloves
- Fresh rosemary (finely chopped)
- Finely chopped onions
- Fresh mint
- Keep in fridge overnight
- Use this to baste every 15-30 minutes during cooking
Aromatics: The Secret Weapon
Inside the cavity:
- Quarter onions and whole lemons
- Whole garlic bulbs
- Generous sprigs of rosemary and mint
- This breaks up during cooking and infuses the meat
Deep garlic technique:
- Create small holes all over the carcass with a knife
- Push whole (or split) garlic cloves deep inside
- As the animal cooks, these release flavor throughout the meat
Behind the shoulders:
- Cut down behind each shoulder
- Load with salt
- Stuff in garlic cloves
- Pack rosemary sprigs in there
Back legs:
- Make incisions
- Salt generously
- Garlic cloves
- Rosemary sprigs
Against the backbone:
- Before pulling wires tight, place garlic and rosemary against the backbone
- This flavors the back straps from the inside
Final Oil and Salt
Give the whole animal a final rub with olive oil and a generous dusting of salt all over.
Part IV: Balancing the Load (Critical Step Most People Skip)
An unbalanced lamb will strain your motor and cook unevenly. Here’s how to fix it:
- Test the balance: Spin the lamb slowly before putting it on the fire. Find where it drops—usually the torso (heaviest part)
- Attach the counterbalance weight: When the meat rests at its heaviest point, attach the counterbalance to the skewer pointing in the opposite direction
- Fine-tune: The further out the weight sits from the center, the more it counteracts. Adjust it up/down until you get a smooth, even turn
- Test again: Spin it—you want no dipping, no heavy spots, just smooth rotation
A properly balanced lamb means even cooking and no motor strain.
Part V: Fire Management—Two Proven Systems
Wood and Charcoal Options
Traditional South African hardwoods for the best smoke and flavor:
- Kameeldoring (Camel Thorn): The king of braai wood—burns hot and long with excellent flavor
- Sekelbos (Sickle Bush): Popular choice, good heat and aroma
- Mopane: Dense hardwood, burns slowly with great coals
- Rooikrans: Good all-rounder for spit braai
Alternative fuels:
- About 5kg of good-quality lump charcoal or briquettes to start
- Eco-friendly compressed grape seed wood
- Avoid: Treated woods, pine, or anything that creates excessive flames licking the meat (causes black sooty resin)
System 1: Two-Pile Method (For Thinner Animals)
Create two coal piles—one at the tail end, one at the head end. Reduce coals in the middle because the animal is thinner there. This prevents burning the center while the thick parts cook through.
System 2: Focus Heat Method (For Fatter Animals)
Concentrate all heat on the shoulders and ass end (thickest parts). Place absolutely no heat over the back straps (center section) until the very end. This is the method for 20kg+ lambs.
Heat Testing
You should be able to hold your hand just underneath the meat for about 5-6 seconds at the start. If you can hold it longer, the heat’s too low. Check and add charcoal every 30-60 minutes.
Height Strategy
Start high, finish low:
- Begin cooking at the highest position on your spit (low and slow start)
- Gradually lower throughout the cook
- In the last 30 minutes, drop it right down to crisp the skin and grill it off
- Modern spits have quick-release height mechanisms on each side
Using a Burning Drum (Optional but Excellent)
If you’ve got a burning drum on the side:
- Light your fire there
- Dig coals out from the bottom
- Distribute them under the meat as needed
- This lets you control heat without flames licking the meat
Part VI: The Cook—Timing Varies by Size
Total cooking time depends on your lamb:
- 13-14kg lamb: 4 hours
- 20-25kg lamb: 5.5-6 hours
Internal temperature target: 60-65°C
Hour-by-Hour for a Smaller Lamb (4-Hour Cook)
Hours 0-2: The Smoke Stage
- Low and slow at highest position
- Building color and smoky flavor
- Fat starts to render (meat looks shiny)
- Baste every 15-30 minutes if using wet method
- Keep checking coals every 30-60 minutes
Hour 2-3: Building Heat
- Lower the height slightly
- Joints under tension start to pop (back legs first, then neck)
- Gradually increase temperature
Final Hour: The Grill Off
- Lower to the final position
- Spread coals along the length
- The backbone, shoulders, and back legs will split (meat is cooked)
- Create that crispy outside layer
- Use small sticks for heat but keep open flames away
Hour-by-Hour for a Larger Lamb (5.5-6 Hour Cook)
Hours 0-3: The Smoke Stage
- Low and slow, highest position
- Building color, getting smoky flavor deep into meat
- Fat renders (shiny appearance)
- Juices running off shoulder should look red (center still rare)
- Focus heat on shoulders and ass end
- Zero heat over back straps
- Keep flames away to avoid black sooty resin
Hour 4: The Pop
- Joints pop (back legs, neck, then shoulders)
- Time to gradually bring temperature up
- Start lowering the height
Hour 4.5: Snip and Spread
- Shoulders start to split
- Snip the two wires holding shoulders (releases tension, protects back straps)
- Spread coals the whole way along now
- Moving into grill-off stage
Final Hour: Full Grill
- Lower to final position
- Backbone, shoulders, back legs all split
- Pump the heat across the entire length
- Fill tray with coals
- Use small sticks but keep open flames away from meat
- You’re grilling the animal off now
Optional: Nyama Braai Sauce Finish
Once the lamb is nearly done and you’re ready to carve, throw Nyama Braai sauce over the chopped meat. Let it baste itself for about 30 minutes. This sauce is so good it’ll make anything taste like something special.
Part VII: Taking It Off and Carving
The Rest (Non-Negotiable)
Let it rest for 10 minutes minimum. Juices need to redistribute. Yes, it’s torture, but it’s worth it.
Removing the Lamb
You’ll need two people for safety—this is hot and heavy:
- Wear your long heat-resistant gloves
- Clip all wires and pull them out
- Undo the front tong
- Slide the animal off the pole
- Slide the whole pole out
Signs of Perfection
When you carve into it, you should see:
- Juice flowing like the Vaal River after good rains—absolute perfection!
- A beautiful crackly layer
- Perfectly cooked shoulders and rear ends
- Back straps that are juicy and tender (we protected them the whole cook)
- Meat falling off the bone
- The neck literally falling off
- Beautiful aromatics inside the cavity
Critical Safety Reminders
- Always wear long heat-resistant gloves when working near the spit
- Get a friend to help lifting the skewer—never do it alone
- Watch your eyes and fingers when working with stainless steel wire—it can flick
- Keep children away from the rotating spit and hot coals
- Check your setup before adding the lamb—make sure nothing is walking or loose
- Keep your wooden blocks oiled throughout the cook for smooth rotation (prevents squeaking and sticking)
Pro Tips from the Masters
- Marinate in a big tray so falling spices can be scooped up and reused—no wastage
- If meat looks dry before seasoning, rub olive oil on first to help spices stick
- Don’t stitch the belly before installing the back brace—think ahead about your sequence
- Test your balance before lighting the fire—once coals are in, it’s too late
- The sheep is your friend—don’t burn it with excessive heat or flames
- Braai 80% on the inside/thick areas, 20% on the back—this ensures even cooking
- Small adjustments matter—check your spit every 30 minutes
Final Words from the Spit Braai Masters
Remember, my friends: A proper spit braai takes time, attention, and respect for the craft. Whether you’re using basic timber and wire or a deluxe setup with all the bells and whistles, the principles remain the same—proper preparation, controlled heat, protection of the tender cuts, and patience.
This is proudly South African cooking at its finest. We don’t just braai—we spit braai, 365 days of the year. Whether you’re in the Karoo, the Lowveld, or Plett, these techniques will serve you well.
Now go fire up that spit and show them how a true South African does it—no kak, just pure lekker lamb that’ll have your guests talking for months.
Lekker braai, boet! May your coals burn hot and your lamb turn perfectly!
Prefer to leave it to the experts? Our spit braai catering in Cape Town team handles the whole braai for you — see spit braai prices & packages or request a quick quote.
