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Posted: 9/16/2009 4:47:14 PM EDT
[Last Edit: supremeweasel67]
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If dupe. please delete. If not, can we get a "sticky"? I checked and did not see anything with Recipes in one location. Some were scattered everywhere. If I am wrong just delete, and I will go stand in the corner. With the Seasons already started, or right around the corner, thought it might be need for a place for all the great Recipes for everyone to share/try. I saw this posted and admit it is quite informative: www.ar15.com/forums/topic.html?b=10&f=19&t=616770 This is one of my favorite personal recipes. Whatever other meals you cook with Beef,Pork or Chicken, you can do with Deer. Only with Deer, the cooking time is less to avoid drying out/overcooking My favorite is: Get a Large Cast Iron Skillet. Use corn oil, pouring about 1/4 inch to half inch in skillet. Heat on medium to medium high In large bowl beat egg and milk together In seperate lage bowl mix flour and spices together Dip tenderized meat into egg/milk mix, roll in flour spice mix, and place in skillet using tongs ( this will help to avoid splash burns) As meat cooks, blood will start to come to the top. Once good amount is starting to "Bubble" to the top, flip using the tongs. Again blood will start to come to top. Let cook for a liitle bit, flip again, and then remove from skillet. (about 2 minutes per side is about right depending on stove and heat setting) Place meat on a platter with about 5 sheets of paper towls on platter ( To soak up oil). (Will also finish "cooking thru" while on platter) Serve meat with some fried potatoes and onions. Green Beans or Blackeye Peas and Corn on the Cobb I have also tried some from here: http://allrecipes.com/Recipes/Meat-and-Poultry/Game-Meats/Venison/ViewAll.aspx |
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a few years ago i tried to get everyone to post some game recipes and was going to make an cook book and send it to everyone but did not get a single reply
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Solders aren’t supposed to be cute and cuddly SGT Smith at his court marshal
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blue cheese bacon elk burgers
fry 8 pieces bacon form ground elk into 4 1/3 pound patty ( if you have to you can use beef I never tried deer but should work) fry in the bacon greese medium rare put on a potato bread bun top each with 2 slices bacon blue cheese crumbles blue cheese dressing black pepper tabasco the tabasco is very important. I will post more when I have time to find them. |
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I want to hear more!
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My epitaph will read: Dan was a really big asshole. Chuck said so. |
Originally Posted By Iowaredneck:
blue cheese bacon elk burgers fry 8 pieces bacon form ground elk into 4 1/3 pound patty ( if you have to you can use beef I never tried deer but should work) fry in the bacon greese medium rare put on a potato bread bun top each with 2 slices bacon blue cheese crumbles blue cheese dressing black pepper tabasco the tabasco is very important. I will post more when I have time to find them. sounds awesome. |
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Here are three recipes I really like. I have a lot of others, as well. If interested in seeing more of this kind of thing, let me know.
Venison Marsala Two Round Steaks from a medium size deer or three from a smallish one will serve 3 to 4 people depending on side dishes and how hungry you are. Cut upper round from lower round of each steak at the "tail" end (away from the bone end). Trim all fat and especially the shiny membrane off. Cut each resulting cut into 2 or 3 cuts about the size of veal cutlets (about 3 inches wide by 4 inches long). If a buck or an older doe, you may wish to sprinkle both sides with Adolf's non-flavored tenderizer. Place cuts on plastic wrap. Cover with plastic wrap and beat with a tenderizing mallet until about 1/2 inch thick and cell structure is broken down a bit. Dredge in flour and set aside. Make Marsala Sauce Ingredients (Use proportionately more if making more venison than described) 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil 1/4 cup onion, diced 1 tablespoon fresh garlic, chopped 1/2 pound fresh mushrooms, sliced 3 tablespoons flour 1/2 cup Marsala wine (You might have to get at liquor store if sales are state controlled where you live) 1 1/2 cups of beef stock Salt and pepper to taste Add olive oil to heavy, hot saucepan. Add onions, garlic, mushrooms and saute until mushrooms are tender. Add flour and cook about 1 minute then deglaze pan with Marsala wine. Add beef stock and cook until thick and flavors are blended. Keep warm until venison is cooked and ready to serve. (You can do these steps at the same time but you do not want the venison to be done before the Marsala sauce - better to keep the sauce warm for a few minutes) Cover bottom of skillet with olive oil and brown venison over medium heat on both sides. Then turn to simmer until fork tender. Place one or two venison cutlets on plate and serve Marsala sauce on side or over top if you are wild. Add sides of your choice. Flat noodles or brown rice and grilled asparagus are good suggestions. Complement with a stout red like a Zinfandel or a Cabernet. Enjoy. Venison Goulash Ingredients for this recipe include... •2 pounds of venison flank meat •3 large onions, sliced thinly •3 tablespoons mild Hungarian Paprika •2 tablespoons oil •1 teaspoon salt •1 large green bell pepper, sliced thinly •1/2 cup water •1/4 cup red wine •2 pounds wide egg noodles Cut the venison into one inch cubes. Heat the oil in a large, heavy soup pot or Dutch oven. Brown the venison. Add the onions, paprika and salt. Continue cooking, stirring often, until the onions have softened. Add the water and green pepper slices, cover, and cook at medium-low heat for one and one-half hours, or until the venison is fork tender. Bring a pot of water to a boil and cook the egg noodles. Serve the finished venison goulash over the noodles for a hearty meal. Shrimp-Stuffed Tenderloin One of the finest ways to celebrate taking a fine buck, or for that matter a nice doe, is to invite company to enjoying eating "high on the deer." This recipe makes use of the backstraps and provides a culinary treat which will have you wishing that half the deer was loin. It's fancy fixin's at their finest. Ingredients: • 1 whole venison backstrap • 1/2 -1 cup Italian salad dressing • 12 whole shrimp, cooked and peeled • 1 teaspoon Old Bay seasoning • 1 tablespoon butter, melted • 2 teaspoons lemon juice • 1-2 slices bacon Cut the backstrap lengthwise to within 1/4 or 1/2 inch of bottom to butterfly. Place meat in Italian dressing and marinate for at least four hours. Cook shrimp in water seasoned to taste with Old Bay seasoning and peel. Place shrimp end to end inside loin. Melt butter in microwave and add lemon juice; drizzle over shrimp. Close meat around shrimp and secure with toothpicks or string. Place bacon strips over shrimp and secure with toothpicks. Place backstrap in a broiler pan and roast at 400 degrees for about 40 minutes or until rare. An instant-read meat thermometer is very helpful here. Meanwhile, prepare wine sauce. Wine Sauce • 1/2 cup real butter • 1/4 cup finely chopped onion • 1/2 cup sliced mushrooms • 1-2 large garlic cloves, minced • 1/2 cup white wine • 1/2 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce Melt butter. Sauté onion mushrooms and garlic until tender. Add wine and Worcestershire sauce and simmer slowly to reduce to about half. To serve, slice backstrap, remove toothpicks, and spoon on wine sauce. Tips: Serve with baked brown rice and bake apricots; both can be placed in the oven while the roast cooks. Add a green salad and you have a delicious meal. |
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steak
+ fire /thread |
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Steak + fire
Yeah, that works pretty good, too. |
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Simple one.
Marinate a backstrap in a gallon freezer bag with Italian dressing and your favorite seasonings for 2-3 days. I use Tony's, paprika and garlic powder. Place on grill dont OVERCOOK. Slice into medallions dip in horseradish sauce. |
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Soylent Green is people!
Never go full retard. 3%er |
Venison Jerky > Venison/cheese sticks. If I have to eat venison my favorite is:
Venison currant mole––excellent breaded filets in a brown sauce with hints of currant jelly and chocolate. Sounds weird but is phenomenal. Recipe can be supplied. NH |
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Just came back from a Hog and Bear Hunt in South Georgia.
While we were there, the property owner cooked a great meal. He took some deer filets and put them in Gallon Freezer Bags, and filled them with ButterMilk. Let soak over night in fridge. Pulled them out and rolled them in a mix of flour, lowery's seasoning salt, salt and pepper. Placed in a oil fryer (Big fish fryer) with canola oil. Temp around 350 degrees When floated to top (Flash Fried), they were pulled, and served. AWESOME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! He did the same with some quail legs and breast filets, some bear meat,, and even some gator. Was quite the feast. |
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BBQ venison burger
Ground venison Favorite sweet bbq sause little brown sugar 1 egg (to keep meat together) little Worcestershire Sauce Mix and form into patty for grille. Great with pepperjack cheese on top! |
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Some good burgers.
Take 2 pounds ground venison and mix with 1 pound breakfast sausage. (i like hot) Form in to pattys and cook. I love this and it makes alot. Cant remember were i got the recipe but its a good one. I also like to do roasts in the crockpot. Just like a regular roast with carrots, potatoes, onions, etc. My girlfriend takes the steaks and cuts them into strips and makes a curry out of it and serves it with veggys over rice. Ill see what kind of curry she uses. Its just a block that dissolves that we get at kroger. This is the first dish she ever cooked for me. I knew she was a keeper. |
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Originally Posted By dmstr02:
Simple one. Marinate a backstrap in a gallon freezer bag with Italian dressing and your favorite seasonings for 2-3 days. I use Tony's, paprika and garlic powder. Place on grill dont OVERCOOK. Slice into medallions dip in horseradish sauce. |
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My epitaph will read: Dan was a really big asshole. Chuck said so. |
I have made corned beef and pastrami out of deer hams. Used a kit from the sausage maker. Super good and easy slice the corned beef thin then fry with sliced cabbage, onion and potato.
PASTRAMI & CORNED BEEF KIT or serve on toasted rye with sauerkraut swiss and 1000 island like we did tonight |
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Last year I cubed up some venison and mixed it with whatever seasoning and then mixed in a really nice soft bleu cheese. Ran it all through the grinder so the cheese was intermixed with the meat. The patties wouldn't stay together well enough to grill so I pan fried them (which probably worked out better so they wouldn't dry out as much). Put them on a bun with all the regular burger fixins. My wife usually won't eat venison but she went back for seconds on these.
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Sunday we applied fresh cracked black pepper to a backstrap from a buck and let it sit for about an hour, then broiled it medium rare. My wife made a port reduction sauce to go with it. It was fantastic. Not one bite left. Easy meal to make.
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Deer Pot Roast (as good as beef roast if not better and this from a guy who hates Gamey food)
- 3 or more pounds of Deer roast - sliced carrots - cut up potatoes - onion cut in to big slices - Sliced celery - 1 pack of Liptons Onion Soup Mix (You can add another half pack to taste if you want but start with one pack) - 2 Cups of water - A jar of Brown gravy (you can add a little to the mix or add it once the roast is done, its up to you) - Salt and Pepper to taste - Tabasco to taste Add all the ingredients and pour the water over the roast and cook all day until the meat iof very tender. Once its really tender I cut the meat up and stir it all up and sometimes add a little bit of brown gravy to the mix. My brother likes to add it after its cooked but its up to you. Make sure you pour the juicees over the meat once and while because you dont want the meat to dry out. |
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Cordon Bleu Turkey
Fresh turkey breast pounded thin (use wooden mallet) to about 3/8 inch thick Use thin sliced ham for first layer over turkey breast Use thin Swiss cheese for second layer over turkey Carefully "roll up" into a cigar like shape and "pin" it together with toothpicks Cut into sections like short stubby cigars Use milk/flour batter to dredge Pan or Deep fry till done ENJOY! |
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Originally Posted By Bittner182:
BBQ venison burger Ground venison Favorite sweet bbq sause little brown sugar 1 egg (to keep meat together) little Worcestershire Sauce Mix and form into patty for grille. Great with pepperjack cheese on top! Tried this tonight,but added Blue Cheese crumbles to the mix and folded it all together with sweet baby back rib sauce. It was slap your momma good! |
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Take some back strap and fry them up in some butter or oil to golden dark brown.
Make regular white gravy with flour, butter, milk and drippings (same pan as you cooked venison) Pour in a large can of stewed tomatoes and mix it all together Place back straps on plate and drown in the tomato gravy. GOOD TO GO |
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This is insultingly easy but its pretty tasty! It's easy to do too, if you're camping out of your truck or just want a good, easy, hot filling meal for a cold winter night...
Cubed Venison steak or roast. Can of condensed vegitable beef soup. Diced sweet onion - optional Fat for sauteing the venison. White Rice (you can also use barley if you prefer) Salt, pepper, tobasco to your taste or other favorite seasonings. You can add most anything you enjoy to this basic setup. I've used a dash of cajun seanoning, Emirils essence etc to the venison. Saute the venison in butter, that spray stuff if you have to use it, margarine or whatever. (You can saute in some onions if you like.) Once done, dump the condensed soup in the pan with the venison. Dilute with water but dont' overdo it. You can add more water later if you want to. Simmer on low till everything is hot and the venison is done to your liking. (If you cook it right, the vension is fork tender and very tasty!) Add rice to the same pan if you want to or cook it seperately. (I've done both and barley can be used too.) Put some rice in a bowl, spoon the venion on top, add salt and pepper or tabasco if you want and have at it! Rolls, salad, cornbread, whatever you like goes nice with this. Enjoy. |
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Bubba's Jerky
4tbl spn A1 Steak Marinade 2tbl spn Texas Pete 2pnc cayenne pepper 1/2pnc chilli powder 2pncgarlic powder salt as like pepper as like splash of sugar i like this u may not gives a sweet after taste 1tbl spn worchester sauce not needed steak marinade has a worchester taste already 1/2 cup water 1-2 shot's of tequilla or crown royal 1 1/2 tbl spn liquid smoke the water and shot's can be replaced with a beer or no alcohol can be used and just use 1 cup of water i do it poor man's way in the oven lowest setting door cracked flip after 3-4 hours 3-4 hour's later usually done. i'm sure u all got jerky recipes i just had to donate mine lol |
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Cut the backstrap in 1/4" thick pieces, cover in flour/salt/pepper/egg mix and fry in olive oil. Can be eaten straight out of the pan or on biscuits. Awesome
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Well came up with this by accident.
I was smoking a whole chicken, and a Boston butt in the smoker. I had a little room, and I saw a deer roast from 2006 in the freezer, that had fallen to the back. So I prepped it, and it went in the smoker also. Lesson learned. - Take extra care to remove ALL tallow as possible - As it contains no fat, a marinated roast works better, also keep squirting with moister bottle to keep from DRYING OUT. - Can actually turn into some pretty tasting jerky if you do get it to dry. - If you never use a steamer pot/bowl of water in smoker, you might want to when doing deer roast. - The "Cajun Injector" is a good thing for deer roasts, as it gets everything (inside) wet, and spreads the flavor around. - I tried the "Creole Butter" , not really thrilled with it, a little to "creamy""sweet" for my taste. - a mixture of "Liquid Smoke, 100% apple juice/cider, and spices is some good stuff for a marinade/injection Now will have a bunch of jerky when deer camp rolls around in Sept, Oct, Nov. without using up my deer burger. |
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Thanks for my Membership, IIRC
'The true Soldier fights not because he hates what is in front of him, but because He loves what is behind him.' -G. K. Chest |
Hell, I'll throw my latest meat loaf recipe in.
Two lbs of ground venison Three eggs One cup of oatmeal Two thirds of a cup of Tone's Southwest Chipotle Seasoning (available at Sam's) One large red onion chopped up fine. A little bit of Liquid Smoke if you want. Mix it well, place in a greased pan, put some ketchup on it. Stick in the refrigerator for a day or two. (The spices seem to permeate it more!) Then cook at 350 degrees around one and a quarter hours - 75 minutes. It comes out pretty good. Even people who don't like venison seem to think it's really good. |
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Thanks to whoever renewed my membership here!!!!!
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Originally Posted By danc46: Hell, I'll throw my latest meat loaf recipe in. Two lbs of ground venison Three eggs One cup of oatmeal Two thirds of a cup of Tone's Southwest Chipotle Seasoning (available at Sam's) One large red onion chopped up fine. A little bit of Liquid Smoke if you want. Mix it well, place in a greased pan, put some ketchup on it. <–––––––– get a rope Stick in the refrigerator for a day or two. (The spices seem to permeate it more!) Then cook at 350 degrees around one and a quarter hours - 75 minutes. It comes out pretty good. Even people who don't like venison seem to think it's really good. I have 2 pounds in the fridge thawing out right now, for making meatloaf. Instead of the Ketchup, try with a Marsala Sauce. (www.gatewaygourmet.com/marsala.htm) Also going to throw 2 pheasants , and a boston butt on the smoker tomorrow. May even throw in a Ohio caught trout if have some room. Smoke over a bowl of Mott's 110 Berry juice, Apple Cider, mixed with water. |
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Thanks for my Membership, IIRC
'The true Soldier fights not because he hates what is in front of him, but because He loves what is behind him.' -G. K. Chest |
My favorite recipe for deer,, EVAR!!!
Baby Deer Fiiet Mignon Ingredients: Freshly killed spotted baby deer tenderloin. Bacon. BBQ sauce. Cut veal sized venison tenderloin into 1" thick steaks. Wrap outside edge with bacon using toothpicks to hold bacon in place. Grill about 5 minutes on each side. Coat with BBQ sauce and grill till glazed. I ate one whole tenderloin, (one side), by myself. It's prolly gonna take a car hit to get the "right" kinda meat for this since there's not too many spotted baby deer in our area during deer season. |
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"If ever a time should come when vain and aspiring men shall possess the highest seats in Government, our country will stand in need of it's experienced patriots to prevent it's ruin". Samuel Adams
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I'm gonna pull out a rump roast (DEER'S ASS for those of you unsure of venison cuts!) and fix it this week end.
I usually slow cook it in a covered pot filled with a couple of cut up onions and strong, freshly brewed coffee at 175 degrees for around 12 hours. Should come out pretty good. Simple and no fuss to fix. |
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I'm a grumpy old fart who suffers from superior intelligence, incredible good looks, and overwhelming modesty.
Truly, I'm a legend in my own mind! [img]icon_smile_big.gif[/img] |
Marinate overnight in tomato juice. Anything you do with it after that is good.
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Originally Posted By Iowaredneck:
I have made corned beef and pastrami out of deer hams. Used a kit from the sausage maker. Super good and easy slice the corned beef thin then fry with sliced cabbage, onion and potato. PASTRAMI & CORNED BEEF KIT or serve on toasted rye with sauerkraut swiss and 1000 island like we did tonight http://i911.photobucket.com/albums/ac317/Iowaredneck/IMG_1547.jpg Will have to try this. |
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Take complete front shoulder bone in (not shot up)
season with : salt to taste pepper to taste onion powder garlic powder pinch of tyme rosemary parsley' sweet basil bayleaf one to two 12 0z cans chicken stock 1 large cut up onion fresh garlic couple of cut up potatoes cut up carrots put in crock pot and cook all day on low . serve over rice . or use same recipe and sear roast in large pot on stove in olive oil then make roux with flour add other ingredients cook until done aprox 2-3 hours on low heat |
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Ok, hands down, the best venison recipe ever!! Cut up loin or ham into 1" thick slices. Beat flat to about the size of a baseball. (tenderize). Place some uncooked sausage on top and lay it flat on the pounded meat. Mix cream cheese with chopped onions, chopped bell peppers, chopped and drained jalepenos. Put a layer of mixture on top of sausage. Fold meat over everything, as tight as you can without oozing out the cream cheese. Wrap with bacon and toothpic together, using the bacon to hold in the cream cheese filling. Put on the grill at 300 degrees and wait. The best deer poppers you will ever eat!
My wife loves the fried loin chunks in buttermilk batter, salt, pepper and fried until the floats. But we had a few people over and the poppers were gone FAST! Everyone loved em. A little work, but well worth it. |
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Originally Posted By M4G37:
Bacon wrapped Backstrap Strip. Marinate backstraps for no more than an hour in 50/50 Dale's seasoning / Worcestershire sauce. Cut into 2 separate pieces, wrap in bacon slice and use toothpicks to secure bacon. Grill to medium well...awesome. http://i935.photobucket.com/albums/ad193/BlaZeJeep/Deerbackstrapsteaks.jpg" THIS.... ever since I made straps that way... it's the only way I make them anymore... just too good. We use Dale's a lot...and as stated...be careful not to over marinade with this stuff...or your going to have a salt lick. Never thought about using it on the venison... I will be giving that one a shot...thanks. The way I do em, 2 pounds venison backstrap (tenderloin), cut into 2 inch chunks 1 quart apple cider 1 1/2 pounds thick sliced heavy peppered bacon ( I get mine at Sam's club) 2 (12 ounce) bottles barbecue sauce, your choice Directions Place chunks of venison into a shallow baking dish, and pour enough apple cider in to cover them. Cover, and refrigerate for 6 - 12 hours. Remove, and pat dry. Discard apple cider, and return venison to the dish. Pour barbecue sauce over the chunks, cover, and refrigerate for 6 -12 more hours. (Sometimes I will mix the Cider and BBQ 50/50 for the second marinade... sometimes I will throw a shot of Jack Daniels in there too) Preheat an outdoor grill for high heat. Charcoal is best, but if you must, use gas. ( If gas is your only option, a dash of liquid smoke to the marinade kicks it a bit) Remove meat from the refrigerator, and let stand for 30 minutes, or until no longer chilled. Wrap each chunk of venison in a slice of bacon, and secure with toothpicks. Brush the grill grate with olive oil when hot, and place venison pieces on the grill so they are not touching each other. The bacon will kick up some flames, so be ready. ( I have a squirt bottle with some apple cider to mist/knock down the flames) Grill, turning occasionally, until the bacon becomes slightly burnt, 15 to 20 minutes. The slower, the better. Dig in, and prepare to want more! As with venison...try not to overcook...I consider them perfect if there is a dime sized pinkish center of the backstrap. Enjoy |
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I'm officially printing this entire thread as motivation in the woods next week!!!
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"Everybody knows you never go full retard. You went full retard, man. Never go full retard." (Kirk Lazarus)
"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." (Edmund Burke) |
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these are just a few that i do, but i always get rave reviews when i do them-
note-i do not post amounts or measurements as we all have our own preferences. feel free to modify the seasonings to suit your tastes, this is just what i use and have only ever receive praise. for the stew, you can substitute the red meat for poultry/rabbit/squirrel and the stock/boulion/broth and thickener for the chicken equivalents to make stew for those meats(ie-rabbit stew would be rabbit, chicken stock, chicken gravy or cornstarch) (1)venison jalapenos ingredients- fresh jalapenos bacon block cheddar cheese venison tenderloin(the part from inside the ribcage along the spine) prep- cut lengthwise and remove seeds and veins from jalapenos place a chunk of cheese inside the jalapeno cut a piece of tenderloin and place inside the jalapeno so that it is between the cheese and the cheese's freedom(you want to keep the cheese in the pepper) wrap w/bacon and secure w/toothpicks cook- grill/broil/bake until bacon is crispy but not burnt. make sure to turn for even cooking. tip- place the toothpicks so that the pepper will stay in place on each side and it's much easier to evenly cook once bacon is crispy, remove from heat and serve(i like some nice fresh from the fridge ranch dressing w/mine) (2)bacon wrapped backstrap(this one is pretty standard) ingredients- backstrap bacon dry rub(equal parts salt,pepper,paprika and brown sugar) prep- generously coat your backstrap w/your dry rub let it sit and come to room temperature wrap the bacon around the backstrap so it resembles a log of file mignons secure bacon w/toothpicks cook- same as the jalapenos-grill/bake/broil until bacon is crispy turn for even cooking using toothpicks to keep it from rolling when bacon is crispy cut the backstap between slices of bacon (3)venison stew(you can use beef as well) ingredients- venison roast baby carrots potatoes seasonings(i use pepper, salt, garlic powder, onion powder, thyme, sage, rosemary) beef stock/broth/boulion corn starch or brown gravy mix(to thicken it up) prep- cube the roast dice the potatoes(if using the bouncy ball sized red skins, just quarter them) cook- place most of the potatoes and carrots in the bottom of a crock pot place the cubed meat on top top off w/remainder of veggies add the stock/broth/boulion until none of the meat or veggies is exposed to air add your seasonings stir until even(make sure meat and veggies are still not exposed when finished) put the lid on your crockpot fire it up to high let it boil on high for no more than 1 hr before reducing heat to med cook on med for 5-11hrs stirring occaisionally you'll know it's done when the veggies are soft and the meat wants to come apart when you stir about 10min before serving, add the cornstarch or gravy mix tip- when adding the starch/gravy mix, stop when it's just a bit thinner than you want. it always thickens up more by the time you get to eating it if you're short on time, you can keep it on high longer to speed up cooking, but i believe the flavors blend better on a slower/lower temp cook |
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Beware the wrath of a patient man.
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I like tenderized venision, chicken fried the way mom used to do it. Second was my mom's deer chili. Mom has been gone 10 yr's and I do a pretty good imitation of her chicken fried steak and my sister doe's her old chili pretty good " but she won't give up the recipe ". Third would be the deer sausage the way me my dad and brother do it. Fourth would be just just about anything else posted on this thread, they all sound good.
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Easy to make - great weeknight meal...
Mexican-Style Goulash Ingredients: 1 lb ground venison (turkey, beef or pork work too) 2 cloves minced garlic 1 cup chopped onion 1 (14.5 oz) can diced tomatoes, undrained 1 (8 oz) can tomato sauce 1 (14.5 oz) can of “Mexicorn” or any other canned corn 1 small can chopped chillies ½ cup water ½ tsp pepper 1 ½ tsp chili powder 1 tsp dried oregano ½ tsp salt 1 tsp cumin ¼ tsp cayenne pepper 1 cup uncooked elbow macaroni 1 cup shredded Mexican cheese (reduced fat works well) Cook ground meat, garlic and onions over medium heat until meat is no longer pink. Stir in all remaining ingredients except for the elbow macaroni and the cheese. Bring to a boil. Add the macaroni. Reduce heat to low/little above low; cover and simmer for 20-25 minutes. Check around 20 min mark - If there is a lot of liquid left, uncover and leave off for the last five minutes. Make sure macaroni is tender, but not overdone at the 20 minute mark. Mix in the cheese until melted. |
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Where is my dinner?
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From Outdoor Life Magazine: Had this last night minus the potatoes. Best venison I have ever tasted. I'm glad my GF loves to cook. The kids even like it.
Grilled Drunken Venison Chops with Pommes Frites (serves 4–6) Ingredients » 8 double-cut loin chops (remove sinew from eye of meat) » 1 cup Stag’s Leap Cabernet Sauvignon (reserve remainder of bottle for drinking) » 3 cloves garlic, crushed and minced » 1 Tbs. cracked black pepper » 1⁄2 cup olive oil » 1 large shallot, peeled and minced » 2 sprigs thyme, cleaned » 1 Tbs. crushed juniper berries » Pinch-plus of Kosher or sea salt » 2 cups blended olive/vegetable oil » 2–3 Idaho potatoes, washed and sliced lengthwise into 1⁄4-inch wedges and patted dry » Sea salt Directions Loin Chops 1. Whisk together wine, garlic, pepper, olive oil, shallot, thyme and juniper berries for marinade. (Do not include salt!) Place chops and marinade together in large dish, making sure to coat meat thoroughly on all sides. Refrigerate a minimum of 2 hours or up to 12 hours, turning meat several times. 2. Preheat grill to ensure that chops will be nicely seared. (The best fire for cooking is natural charcoal, but gas will do.) 3. Wipe excess marinade off chops before placing chops on grill to avoid flare-ups from olive oil (and chipped teeth from juniper berries!). Turn over only once on grill to help get nice grill marks. 4. When you’ve reached your favorite doneness for venison (preferably no more than medium), pull chops from grill. Let rest to set juices (5–8 minutes). Sprinkle with sea salt. Pommes Frites 1. Heat oil slowly in deep sauté pan over medium-high heat. Look for heat waves rippling across surface oil, or test a small piece of potato before adding all fries. (Oil that is too hot or too cold is your enemy—the ideal temperature is 425 degrees.) 2. Gently add potatoes to oil, browning on all sides to tender inside. Remove to baking screen or cookie sheet with paper towel and salt immediately. Serve one or two loin chops per person with pommes frites, pour a glass of Stag’s Leap and enjoy! Note: You can substitute any good-quality Cabernet Sauvignon for the Stag’s Leap in this recipe. http://www.outdoorlife.com/photos/gallery/hunting/whitetail-deer/game-prep-and-cooking/2010/11/perfect-venison?photo=6#node-1001335332 |
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BBQ Deer Shoulder:
1 Shoulder, JD BBQ Sauce (enough that you like it) and H20. Drop the shoulder into a pot, cover in steak rub and BBQ sauce, fill up with H20 until it just covers the shoulder. Heat until boiling, let simmer for 3-4 hours and keep adding water. Before serving, pull it with a fork so that it's shredded and let it simmer until it's reduced to a sticky coating, then serve on hamburger buns. Fan-fucking tastic! |
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I'm a little late to the party, but I'll throw in anyway.
Take either tenderloins, backstraps, or a nice chunk of ham. Cut it into strips about 6 inches long, and 2 inches around. Marinate in Red Wine Vinegar, maybe some Worchesterchire sauce, and a little Italian Dressing for anywhere from 2 hours to 2 or 3 days. Mix up your favorite seasoning, mine is Montreal Steak seasoning, Carribean Jerk, and a liberal amount of brown sugar. Pull the meat out of the marinade and dust with the seasoning mix. Get your grill hot as hell. Throw the meat on the grill and count to about 45. Flip and count to 45 again. Remove from fire, and dust again *lightly* with the seasoning mix. Enjoy. On my grill, 45 seconds per side on the highest setting will sear the hell out of the outside, and leave the middle medium rare to rare. For an extra kick, you can throw a liberal amount of tabasco in with the marinade, or wrap the meat in bacon. Either way, or both works great! This recipe always gets people to comment on the flavor. The Red Wine Vinegar really adds to the flavor of venison, and helps to break down the muscle. This same recipe also works GREAT for pork backstraps, or tenderloins. |
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Originally Posted By itsARanchrifle: "The only thing I can do on a computer is find ARFCOM and decent porn.
And by decent, I mean anal and fisting." |
I like to take some venison backstrap and butterfly sections into 1/2 inch thick pieces. Then, I marinate the steaks overnight in some red wine, touch of soy sauce, and maybe a little garlic. Before grilling, I sprinkle a little Montreal seasoning on both sides and grill no more than 4 minutes per side.
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Originally Posted By Anglingarchitect: SNIP Ate gator on Sunday. http://i4.photobucket.com/albums/y122/anglingarchitect/Gatorhead.jpg Nice, How big was it? Where at? Love some Smoked BBQ Gator |
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Live Free Or Die, Death Is Not The Worst Of Evils- Gen. John Stark
'The true Soldier fights not because he hates what is in front of him, but because He loves what is behind him.' -GK Chesterton Thanks, IIRC |
9 footer, lake Jessup in Central Florida.
Yummm! |
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Headed to camp in 4 hours.
So last Thursday, I fire up the smoker. If I am going to fire it up, I pile the meat in. Did a pork tenderloin, a whole bunch of pork chops. Of course they were in for different times. But then, I remembered I had some deer steaks left over from last years kill. (need to clean out for this years deer) They are all nicely tenderised. I use some McCormick's Kickin Chickin seasoning, a little Lea and Perrins Chicken Marinade, and into the smoker they go. Smoking over some Mesquite chunks for 1:30 minutes. I would open the smoker every 20-30 minutes ( I know), and spray with apple juice. I had a water pan in the smoker full of water, apple juice and vinegar. After 1:30 minutes they were AWESOME!!!!!!!!!! Tender, Moist, and perfect flavor. Let some others try, and they thought it was great too. I know that deer requires greater care when cooking, because it can dry out quickly, but I think this will become my favorite way instead of pan frying in oil with a cast iron skillet. If you have never tried, give it a try. ETA: Time to get the donuts. I am off to get a Thurdy Pointer................................................. |
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Live Free Or Die, Death Is Not The Worst Of Evils- Gen. John Stark
'The true Soldier fights not because he hates what is in front of him, but because He loves what is behind him.' -GK Chesterton Thanks, IIRC |
Mongolian Beef Venison
Package of venison chops or tenderloin Scallions sliced diagonally Couple garlic cloves chopped Cooking oil 1 tsp Corn Starch 2 tbs Soy Sauce 2 tbs Teriyaki Sauce 2 tsp Oyster Sauce (taste good without this if you don't have it) Cut the venison into thin slices. Mix the sauces and corn starch together. Put mixture and venison into a big zip lock bag and let marinate for at least half an hour. Heat up some oil in a frying pan and saute the garlic for a couple minutes. Mix in the venison and sauces, stir fry until nearly done, then stir in the scallions. Add some salt as needed and enjoy. Be careful not to overcook the meat, the thin slices cook fast. |
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Axis Salsa Burger
*This recipe makes 6-8 burgers What you’ll need: 1-2 lbs of ground Venison 1 Package of Lipton onion soup mix 1 Sm. jar of favorite Salsa Preparation/Cooking: 1. Lay/spread out ground meat to approximately 1/2″ thick 2. Mix in onion soup mix and then spread meat out to 1/2″ thick. 3. Pour Salsa over 3/4 of meat and mix. 4. Take a medium handful of ground meat mixture and form into approximately 3/4″-1″ thick patty. 5. Cook and Enjoy! *Bacon and Velveeta chunks can be added into meat mixture for a savory bacon cheese burger* |
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Parents, if you're not going to teach your kids what is and is not acceptable somebody else will. You may care if your kid lives or dies, but many other people will not.
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