


David Hammond wrote:
This meat was superb, fork tender and incredibly flavorful without a hint of gaminess (not that a little game would be a problem)...
seebee wrote:Where was your venison from?
seebee wrote:Any idea of diet? Corn fed?
David Hammond wrote:seebee wrote:Where was your venison from?
Our deer was harvested in Iowa.
Davooda wrote:This past fall, I harvested a huge (190 pounds field dressed) 4-year-old doe awesome.
jimswside wrote:Davooda wrote:This past fall, I harvested a huge (190 pounds field dressed) 4-year-old doe awesome.
interesting, most of the hunters I know give the does a pass, and only go for bucks.
Khaopaat wrote:I learned this from a housemate in college (he was enrolled in our School of Natural Resources, and is currently some sort of DNR employee or park ranger or something), when he said he was gonna go shoot himself a doe and we all gasped with horror
sazerac wrote:And some get a twinkle in their eye and lick their lips when they hear, "Babe".
David Hammond wrote:sazerac wrote:And some get a twinkle in their eye and lick their lips when they hear, "Babe".
Yes, I thought of that movie, but I don't think that pig had anywhere near the cultural impact of, say, Bambi.
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
In today's talk on the ethical boundaries of eating companion animals, there was a sidebar discussion on Australian's aversion to eating kangaroo. The credit goes to a 1960's television series called 'Skippy' featuring a lovable kangaroo. I bumped into a film clip of the opening credits.
Bruce Kraig mentioned meeting the show's producers who said the kangaroos were untrainable. They had to simply film kangaroos doing kangaroo stuff, then edit them into a scene. Occasionally they had Skippy do activities no kangaroo could do, such as dial a rotary phone. For this occasion, they used rabbit feet to simulate the activity. I found this clip with the rabbit feet standing in as Skippy the kangaroo performs as a drummer.
The unpredictable behavior of Skippy the Kangaroo is illustrated in this episode where he jumps with his companion from a hot air balloon. In the water, the kangaroo sort of takes off in a different direction while they are in the water awaiting rescue.
The Skippy television set remains, there is a short documentary and plea to preserve it.
Of course, we have our own animal cultural icons in Flipper and Bambi.
Attrill wrote: "Wilbur?!?!"
David Hammond wrote:Attrill wrote: "Wilbur?!?!"
I believe this is also what horses say when they hear human is on the menu.
budrichard wrote:I've been hunting whitetail in both SE Wisconsin and Northern Wisconsin for over 30 years and most of what has been Posted is correct about the taste versas the feed. Whitetail harvested around large tracts of corn are very tasty but lean. The tenderloin and backstraps are best prepared swiftly sauteed medium rare and served while piping hot. The rest of the animal is best either ground or slow cooked. A commercial processor will cut a deer as he would a steer across bones and leads to cuts that do not cook as well as boning out the animal yourself. The threat of CWD in Wisconsin has lead the DNR to reccamand that all venison be boned and the the spinal cord and other bones not be cut while processing. We have always processed our own venison so for us this is nothing new. None of my venison makes it into sausage. The old prohibition still stands among many that the does should not be shot and the bucks harvested except that Wisconsin has realized for 'Herd Control' the does need to go, so in some areas you must shoot a doe before you can shoot a buck, called 'Earn A Buck'. In the 'Metro Areas' you can purchase as many Doe Permits as ones wants and harvest as many does as one can.
I am always suspect of gifted venison because many hunters cannot clean thier deer properly and provide cold storage properly until processed. Invariably the first time the wife cooks the venison, its smelly and doesn't taste good. Because of the expense in time and effort, the hunter cannot throw it away and soothes himself with gifting the venison.-Dick
Davooda wrote:Jim - I'm blessed to be able to hunt on a family farm in central Illinois and we have way more deer in my area than hunters. When I first started hunting deer in northern Illinois 35 years ago (near Genoa), the state prohibited shooting does and hunters had to take bucks only because the deer herd was very small. However, management of the herd has been so successful that, nowadays, a hunter can take up to five or six deer annually, but only one buck (I think). And people now pay big money to hunt the cervid monsters of Jo Daviess and Pike County, among others.
My practice since moving to central Illinois has been to harvest a doe first and then a buck. I also try to take the oldest, most mature doe as these animals typically give birth to twins, and sometimes triplets, annually which keep the herd growing despite the best efforts of the hunters! I did have a 110-yard shot at a nice ten-point buck in the second shotgun season and missed. Didn't seem him again.
The deer in central Illinois feed mainly on corn, but I have also seem them eat soybeans, milo (sorghum), sunflower seedlings, acorns (a favorite) alfalfa clover, apples and pears off the tree, the shrubs and flowers in my yard, etc. The meat is very close to beef in its flavor profile, to my taste, but does have a slight gamey tinge that appeals to me big-time. I only eat beef a couple times per year since my freezer is usually stocked with plenty of venison.
Deer ribs on the Big Green Egg are also a Davooda family taste treat!
Davooda







