🐐 How Much Goat Meat Per Person
Estimate goat portions for curry pots, biryani trays, taco bars, grill platters, and roast spreads using guest mix, cut yield, cooking loss, hold time, and extra servings.
| Meal style | Cooked per adult | Typical sides | Best planning note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Curry or stew bowl | 6.8 oz | Rice, naan, salad | Good default for most family dinners |
| Biryani tray | 5.8 oz | Rice, yogurt, salad | Rice stretches servings better than roast |
| Roast platter | 7.8 oz | Potatoes, greens | Center-of-plate service needs more meat |
| Grill or BBQ plate | 8.2 oz | Flatbread, slaw | Expect a heavier appetite and trim loss |
| Kebab meal | 6.4 oz | Rice, sauce, vegetables | Skewers help portion control at service |
| Taco or wrap bar | 4.9 oz | Tortillas, beans, salsa | One of the most efficient serving formats |
| Goat cut | Usable cooked yield | Typical purchase unit | Best use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bone-in curry pieces | 58% | 2.5 lb tray | Long-simmer curry and stew |
| Boneless stew cubes | 78% | 2 lb pack | Fast curry, tacos, wraps |
| Shoulder roast | 68% | 4 lb roast | Pulled goat or braise |
| Leg roast | 70% | 5 lb roast | Sliced holiday platter |
| Ground goat | 90% | 1 lb pack | Tacos, kofta, stuffed breads |
| Rib chops | 63% | 1.5 lb rack | Grill plates and special dinners |
| Guests | Curry raw buy | Biryani raw buy | Grill raw buy |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6 people | 4.5 lb bone-in | 3.5 lb boneless | 5 lb chops |
| 12 people | 9 lb bone-in | 7 lb boneless | 10 lb chops |
| 25 people | 18 lb bone-in | 14 lb boneless | 21 lb mixed grill |
| 50 people | 36 lb bone-in | 28 lb boneless | 42 lb mixed grill |
| Cut | Calories / 4 oz cooked | Protein / 4 oz | Fat / 4 oz |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bone-in curry pieces | 178 | 28 g | 7 g |
| Boneless cubes | 170 | 27 g | 6 g |
| Shoulder roast | 194 | 26 g | 9 g |
| Leg roast | 188 | 27 g | 8 g |
| Ground goat | 208 | 24 g | 12 g |
| Rib chops | 220 | 25 g | 13 g |
Curry Night
Best when you want rich sauce, rice, and a forgiving hold window.
Biryani Tray
Stretches meat efficiently because rice takes more plate space than sauce.
Grill Party
Needs the heaviest buy because guests see the meat and tend to take seconds.
Taco Bar
One of the easiest formats for large groups because tortillas and toppings stretch each serving.
Lean cubes
Bone-in curry
Roast shoulder
Ground goat
When planning a goat feast, determining how much goat meat to purchase are a necessary task. If you purchase too little goat meat, you will find yourself without a meal for your guests. However, if you purchase too much goat meat, you will have leftover.
Additionally, because goat meat is lean and often contains bones that must be removed, you will have lesser edible meat than the total weight of the cut of goat meat that you purchase. A standard serving of cooked goat meat is between six and eight ounce. However, you must adjust for your guests needs.
How Much Goat Meat to Buy for a Party
For example, young children will eat about two-thirds of an adult portion of food. You can also adjust according to the type of meal you are preparing. If the goat meat is part of a biryani, it is more filling with the rice so guests will only require about five and a half ounce of goat meat.
If the goat meat is part of a curry, you will need to give guests about seven ounce of cooked goat meat. If you are roasting or grilling the goat meat, you will need to provide eight ounces or more of goat meat per person to accounts for it being the main part of the meal. The cut of the goat meat will also impact how much you need to purchase.
If you choose boneless goat meat, you will get the most yield as there are no bones to remove. Boneless goat meat is best used for stews. If you choose bone in goat meat, there will be less edible meat.
Using bone-in goat meat you may only get a fifty-eight percent yield. To account for this, you must purchase more bone-in goat meat. Ground goat meat has a high yield of ninety percent of the package weight will be edible.
Shoulders of goat meat can also be shred to feed more people at the feast. The cooking method will also shrink the weight of the goat meat. Braised goat meat will retain more moisture than roasted or grilled goat meat.
If you are preparing a buffet, you will need to purchase meat that accounts for the ten to twenty percent additional meat needed due to the meat sitting out on the buffet table. Goat meat contains twenty-five to twenty-eight gram of protein per four ounce of cooked meat. Goat meat is lean and contains approximately thirteen grams of fat per four ounce of cooked meat.
There are between one hundred seventy and two hundred twenty calories in a serving of goat meat. Goat meat is high in protein and low in fat making it a good choice for a large group to eat. To determine the amount of goat meat needed for a large group of people, simply use math.
If six people require four and a half pounds of bone-in goat meat for curry, then twelve people will require nine pounds of bone-in goat meat. Fifty people will require either thirty-six pounds of bone-in goat meat or twenty-eight pounds of boneless goat meat. Raw meat come in specific weights for packages so you must round the amount of goat meat necessary to feed your guests to the nearest whole package of meat to ensure that you do not purchase too little goat meat for your guests.
