Saturday, February 28, 2015
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
Bird Up Pheasant Soup
Ingredients are per 500ml of stock
■ Salt and black pepper
■ 50ml-75ml (13⁄4fl oz-21⁄2fl oz) vermouth or sherry
■ 30g (1oz) butter
■ 1 diced shallot or red onion
■ 1 handful basmati rice
■ 1 large diced carrot
■ 1 small potato peeled and diced
■ 2 sticks chopped celery (or 1⁄2 bulb fennel)
■ Handful finely chopped parsley
■ Salt and black pepper
■ 50ml-75ml (13⁄4fl oz-21⁄2fl oz) vermouth or sherry
■ 30g (1oz) butter
■ 1 diced shallot or red onion
■ 1 handful basmati rice
■ 1 large diced carrot
■ 1 small potato peeled and diced
■ 2 sticks chopped celery (or 1⁄2 bulb fennel)
■ Handful finely chopped parsley
Skim any fat off the cold stock, then heat it. Taste and add salt as needed and the vermouth. Bring to the boil for 3-5 minutes; when the alcohol has evaporated, keep it simmering. In a separate pan, melt the butter, add the onion and rice and then season. Sweat over a low heat with the lid on until the onion is soft, then add the rest of the veg. Now pour in a little stock and bubble furiously for a minute; then add the remaining stock and boil until the rice is cooked but still a bit nutty. Taste and season again and stir in all the chopped parsley.
Saturday, February 14, 2015
Friday, February 13, 2015
Crappie recipe……..excellent!
Crappie recipe……..excellent!
Ingredients
7 ounces lemon-lime flavored soda
1 cup pancake mix
1 egg
1 teaspoon sugar (optional)
1 lb crappie, cleaned and deboned ( or other whitefish)
1 cup flour, to flour fish
4 cups vegetable oil ( or more)
Directions:
Cut fish into pieces no larger than 2 inches.
Season with salt and pepper.
Flour fish in small batches in a Ziploc bag, then lay on a plate.
Allow fish to sit for 30 minutes.
Heat 3-4 inches oil in a medium saucepan on medium heat about 10-15 minutes.
Mix 7up, egg, pancake mix, and sugar.
Individually dip fish into batter and then gently place in oil.
Fry about 5 pieces at a time. Oil should be at a simmer when fish is cooking. Fry on both sides until golden.
Drain on paper towels.
7 ounces lemon-lime flavored soda
1 cup pancake mix
1 egg
1 teaspoon sugar (optional)
1 lb crappie, cleaned and deboned ( or other whitefish)
1 cup flour, to flour fish
4 cups vegetable oil ( or more)
Directions:
Cut fish into pieces no larger than 2 inches.
Season with salt and pepper.
Flour fish in small batches in a Ziploc bag, then lay on a plate.
Allow fish to sit for 30 minutes.
Heat 3-4 inches oil in a medium saucepan on medium heat about 10-15 minutes.
Mix 7up, egg, pancake mix, and sugar.
Individually dip fish into batter and then gently place in oil.
Fry about 5 pieces at a time. Oil should be at a simmer when fish is cooking. Fry on both sides until golden.
Drain on paper towels.
Simple Deer Heart Preparation
Simple Deer Heart Preparation
For more than four decades every member of my deer hunting gang
has carried a plastic bag intended for the sole purpose of transporting a
venison heart to camp. Much relished, most venison hearts are cooked
and served with our very next evening meal. A lot of trial and error
went into developing the recipe that makes heart the treat we so often
enjoy.
Directions for preparing heart are not ordinarily found in cookbooks. Here’s how we do it.
immediately following field dressing, separate (cut) the heart from its blood vessels and enveloping sack (pericardium), squeeze blood from its internal chambers and drop the heart into a clean plastic bag for cooling. Heart (and all other cuts of venison) should be fully cooled before cooking.
beginning at the bottom (the pointed end), slice the heart into half-inch-thick pieces until you reach the portion where valves are located. The remaining upper chambers of venison heart are small and thin-walled so we generally discard this remaining section. Trim off excess fat.
lay the slices on a plate, sprinkle both sides with Adolph’s meat tenderizer (spiced), puncture the meat with a fork on both sides about every quarter-inch (thus poking tenderizer into the meat), and allow to stand at room temerature for 30 minutes or more.
add enough cooking oil to cover the bottom of a frying pan and place on high heat. When the oil begins to bubble, add heart slices and brown quickly on both sides.
turn down the heat, add fresh or canned mushrooms and sliced onions and fry slowly, stirring often, until the mushrooms and onions are well browned (caramelized). Then pour in a can of cream of mushroom soup, fill the can with milk and pour that in too. Stir well and then simmer for an additional 20-30 minutes before serving. The soup becomes a very tasty gravy. Mashed potatoes (instant) are therefore a staple with venison heart in our camp.
Unfortunately (or fortunately) even two venison hearts is not enough to satisfy the hunger of four or more hunters in deer camp. Therefore, while heart is being prepared, we prepare an additional meat of some kind. One of our favorites is fillet Mignon of venison
Directions for preparing heart are not ordinarily found in cookbooks. Here’s how we do it.
immediately following field dressing, separate (cut) the heart from its blood vessels and enveloping sack (pericardium), squeeze blood from its internal chambers and drop the heart into a clean plastic bag for cooling. Heart (and all other cuts of venison) should be fully cooled before cooking.
beginning at the bottom (the pointed end), slice the heart into half-inch-thick pieces until you reach the portion where valves are located. The remaining upper chambers of venison heart are small and thin-walled so we generally discard this remaining section. Trim off excess fat.
lay the slices on a plate, sprinkle both sides with Adolph’s meat tenderizer (spiced), puncture the meat with a fork on both sides about every quarter-inch (thus poking tenderizer into the meat), and allow to stand at room temerature for 30 minutes or more.
add enough cooking oil to cover the bottom of a frying pan and place on high heat. When the oil begins to bubble, add heart slices and brown quickly on both sides.
turn down the heat, add fresh or canned mushrooms and sliced onions and fry slowly, stirring often, until the mushrooms and onions are well browned (caramelized). Then pour in a can of cream of mushroom soup, fill the can with milk and pour that in too. Stir well and then simmer for an additional 20-30 minutes before serving. The soup becomes a very tasty gravy. Mashed potatoes (instant) are therefore a staple with venison heart in our camp.
Unfortunately (or fortunately) even two venison hearts is not enough to satisfy the hunger of four or more hunters in deer camp. Therefore, while heart is being prepared, we prepare an additional meat of some kind. One of our favorites is fillet Mignon of venison
Tuesday, February 10, 2015
Friday, February 6, 2015
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