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Any tips with venison?


fieldwanderer
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I was given some Roe a few months ago and, although it was lovely meat, it was too "strong" for me :/ I've yet to find anything shootable that I like and I'd really hoped venison would be the answer.

 

I've been asked to thin the muntjack and roe down on one of my permissions (the roe will have to wait until I have a legal calibre rifle) and would love to try again but I really don't know where to start - are any cuts a little less "gamey" (I think that's the word I'm looking for) and any way of cooking them, recipes etc that you think would help? I think I'd rather keep it to traditional recipes than curry it.

 

General advice would be best I suppose as I'll be after the roe one day too....

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Leave the venison soaking in lightly salted water over night and then replace the salted water with fresh, clean water the next day and leave for another hour or so. I don't know why but it can remove some of the gaminess. The age and sex of the animal can make a difference. I'm not a fan of offal but my father's favourite bit of roe is the liver and many others will agree.

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Dont shoot old ones, rutting ones or ones that are alarmed. then when you do shoot one, bleed it and clean gralloch, hang it 24 hours and then butcher.

 

two top straps will be the soft meat, it does not want over cooking. burn both sides, turn once, then into a warm oven. 100c for 15-20 minutes with blackcurrents or red current jelly, black pepper and salt. Take out and allow to rest.

I like it with a cheese mash or chunky chips with the juice turned into a gravy.

 

the front legs have a good muscle that you can trim and turn into a nice stake, as does the back, but i like the back as roast, bone it out and tie with a few sprigs of rosemary in the middle, red wine, juniper berries, rosemary, black pepper and salt.

 

I do chunks for the casseroles and a chilli with chunks for a change is rather nice.

 

i trim heavy so end up with a lot of mince, burgers with chilli is the best, 25% pork mince, few chemicals (herbs). Im about to try something totally different, it worked fantastic with the pate so im going to try it with the burgers this time, Cranberry infused with brandy and pistachio nuts, i might swap the nuts to cashew as i have 40lb of mince to mess with.

 

2 fallow, 140lb and 92lb larder weight. gives a bit of meat.

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Dont shoot old ones, rutting ones or ones that are alarmed. then when you do shoot one, bleed it and clean gralloch, hang it 24 hours and then butcher.

 

two top straps will be the soft meat, it does not want over cooking. burn both sides, turn once, then into a warm oven. 100c for 15-20 minutes with blackcurrents or red current jelly, black pepper and salt. Take out and allow to rest.

I like it with a cheese mash or chunky chips with the juice turned into a gravy.

 

the front legs have a good muscle that you can trim and turn into a nice stake, as does the back, but i like the back as roast, bone it out and tie with a few sprigs of rosemary in the middle, red wine, juniper berries, rosemary, black pepper and salt.

 

I do chunks for the casseroles and a chilli with chunks for a change is rather nice.

 

i trim heavy so end up with a lot of mince, burgers with chilli is the best, 25% pork mince, few chemicals (herbs). Im about to try something totally different, it worked fantastic with the pate so im going to try it with the burgers this time, Cranberry infused with brandy and pistachio nuts, i might swap the nuts to cashew as i have 40lb of mince to mess with.

 

2 fallow, 140lb and 92lb larder weight. gives a bit of meat.

 

After reading that I'm starving :)

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can i ask how you cooked the roe and if it was hung so we can understand what you did, my wife struggles with a game flavour and the best way way i find is not hang and to either do the roe into chops on the bone doubles if you want barnsley style or to do a haunch in the oven it goes more lamb like.

muntjack is sweeter than roe and i think more delicate, atb wayne

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The fillet should be pan fried quickly and served pink. The haunch roasted and the shoulder and anything else casseroled.

A gamey but not strong flavour if cooked well.

I find it's often mind over matter when people are served game. My daughter in law and son in law love what I cook when I tell them it's chicken or beef but the mention of pheasant or venison receives a different reaction.

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I know what you're saying, I've never been as keen as some though I'll eat pigeon and pheasant (the latter was especially nice, I just didn't see the fascination).

 

The roe we had though, even the old man didn't eat much of it and he's known to eat just about whatever's put in front of him. Personally, I think I'd've much preferred a roast or a steak - hopefully it won't be long until I get the chance again - though legally I'm restricted to munties (never seen a c.w.d) as I couldn't get bigger than .22-250 but have aolq with it.

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