Blick Recipes
Google
Web Site
Main Menu
 Home
 Appetizers
 BBQ
 Beans
 Beef
 Beverages
 Breads
 Breakfast
 Cheese
 Chicken
 Condiments
 Crockpot
 Desserts
 Eggs
 Ethnic
 Fruits
 Game
 Grains
 Holiday
 Lamb
 Nuts
 Other
 Pork
 Rice
 Sauce
 Seafood
 Seasonings
 Snacks
 Soups
 Spreads
 Stews
 Vegetables
Game Cooking Recipe
Category: Game
Rating: N/A
Servings: 1


Ingredients

1 x no ingredients



Cooking Directions:

Venison is the generic term for meat from a large group of related grazing animals. It includes caribou, reindeer, deer, moose and elk. For all practical purposes it also includes musk oxen, antelope and buffalo [bison]. The recipes are generally interchangeable. musk oxen and buffalo cuts tend to be more tender as these animals are more sedentary by nature.

You can do anything with venison that you would beef. Just remember that it is drier- less fat, so steaks should be marinaded/tenderized/pounded and cooked just to medium, not over-done.

It is important to realize that wild meat can vary in quality and toughness, whereas commercial beef is a pretty uniform product. Venison factors are:

~1- Age and sex of animal. Meat can be as tender and mild as veal in a young doe. (And you always get steer meat in a store never bull. Castration does make a difference.)

~2-Clean kill. If a deer is stalked while it is peacefully grazing and dropped dead in its tracks, it will taste far better than an animal that has been chased by hounds, then gut shot, then it runs a few more miles before collapsing. The blood is full of adrenaline and the acidic by-products of exercise and exertion and the flesh is tainted by the torn up organs.

~3- Aging and butchering. When I was a kid growing up in Eastern Ontario, we went deer hunting in the fall, when it was cool and deer were hung to age and tenderize, then butchered at a local abattoir that handled beef and pork professionally. We received nicely wrapped, properly cut and trimmed frozen packages. It was generally pretty good. Up here caribou is shot all year long and traditionally butchered immediately [before it spoils in the summer or freezes solid in the winter] And some hunters are more skilled at butchering than others... I have been made "gifts" of quarters of caribou that have been field frozen with the fur on and wrapped in green garbage bags and stored in somebody's back yard for a month or two! I have also received superb sausages made by a man who apprenticed as a sausage-maker in Germany.

If you know where your meat came from, you will know whether it should tenderized or just cooked.

If your steaks are coming from a commercial game farm, they will be from a young animal, carefully slaughtered and aged. I would treat them the same as any prime beef T-bone. Probably charcoal BBQ'd or gas grilled to just medium rare and sprinkled with a little salt and pepper AFTER it has been cooked... nothing fancy, no marinades and no strong BBQ sauces. That way you will be able to truly taste the venison.

For wild meat you may want to marinade first, if it's tough.

File ftp://ftp.idiscover.co.uk/pub/food/mealmaster/recipes/caribou.zip
game

=- Rate This Recipe -=


Very good

Good

Average

Poor

Very Poor
Related Recipes:
Curried Turkey Hash
Stuffed Cornish Game Hens
Brandied Duck With Peppercorns
Buffalo Jerky
Old-Fashioned Turkey-Barley Soup



Home | Privacy | Feedback | News
Copyright © 2006-2008 BlickRecipes.com. All Rights Reserved.