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Big Game Recipes |
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The
following are a few of our own personal favorites. The
game is all interchangeable. We primarily use elk and
venison, however antelope is very good in any of these
recipes as well.
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NEW!
Chicken Mushrooms
Elk or Venison Stroganoff
Duck Recipe
Glazed Venison Roast
Crockpot Elk or Venison
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Venison or Elk Jerky
Enchilada Stacks
Chinese Tomato Elk
Salami Sausage
Colorado Venison Stew |
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note: If you have a big game recipe you would like to
share, please write to info@biggamehunt.net.
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Chicken
Mushrooms - submitted by Jeff R. Johnson
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These
tasty mushrooms can add a lot to any dish. When I am
doing extended stays in the back country finding one
of these is a real treat. There are NO "look-a-likes",
when I found my first one I went to my Audubon editable
mushroom guide and took quick notice that my find was
the featured photo on the cover. It's of the sulfur
mushroom family. That's a dime in this photo for size
comparison.
The
mushroom has a fine meat, the one shown here was about
4 lbs. This like many mushrooms can be sautéed and seasoned
to much any flavor you desire, they have no real dominate
flavor of their own. I sauté mine in olive oil seasoned
with chopped garlic and some fresh ground pepper with
a dash of salt. It takes a little longer than one would
think to fully cook them. In half inch slices I'd say
about 20+ minutes on medium heat. It maintains it's
brilliant color after cooking and the meat will be about
the texture of a tender cooked young "chicken" being
the obvious origin of it's name.. As you can see in
the photo below as I prepare this dish on my impeccably
clean range, with a dash of a wild herb for garnish
and properly served on a fine plate one could make a
cover photo for "Bon Appetit" with another fine dish
completely wild harvested.

Editors Note: Wild mushrooms are delicious;
however picking the wrong mushroom can be deadly. This
recipe is just for reference, please make sure you pick
the correct mushroom while afield. If you're a novice
mushroom picker, consult an expert first.
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Elk
or Venison Stroganoff
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1
1/2 - 2 lbs. diced elk or venison
Brown at medium/high to high heat in about 2 Tbs. of
canola or olive oil. When browned, add 1 small diced
onion, brown again. Sprinkle over meat about 2-3 Tbs
flour or cornstarch, 1-2 Tsp. beef bouillon, salt &
pepper, stir & brown lightly. Slowly add approximately
2-3 cups water (you can substitute beef or chicken broth
if you prefer). If mixture is thick, add more water.
Turn down heat and simmer covered for at least 2-4 hours,
stirring occasionally, add more liquid if mixture gets
thick. Meat should cook until fork tender, the time
can vary depending on cut of meat. Most tougher cuts
of elk/venison take at least 4 hours. The trick in making
good stroganoff from elk or venison is cooking it long
enough. If you are a fan of mushrooms, you can add a
little bit of dried mushrooms to the meat while its
simmering, any type will do from shitake to porcini
to dried portobello mushrooms.
Clean
& slice 1/2 to 1 lb of fresh mushrooms. Sauté
in skillet in 2-3 Tbs. butter until lightly browned.
Set aside.
When
meat is done cooking, stir in about 1 cup of sour cream
& sautéed mushrooms. Add salt & pepper to taste.
Heat & serve over cooked noodles or rice.
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Duck
Recipe
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This
easy recipe is a major hit every fall when we are duck
hunting in North Dakota.
*Duck
breast sliced into 1/2" strips (These will be grilled
so cut them to allow cooking on the grate of the grill
without falling through)
*Put sliced breast meat into zip lock bags to be marinated
(about half full)
*pour olive oil into bag until it almost covers the
duck.
3 T of soy sauce
3 T of Worchesteir sauce
1 T of SeasonSalt
*mix bag together thoroughly and leave in refrigerator
for 24 hrs or more.
Take
duck strips out and cook on the grill - do not overcook
the duck - the meat will get tough in a hurry if you
do - cook strips a about 3-4 minutes on each side.
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Glazed
Venison Roast
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4-5
pound Venison Roast
2 tbs Pickling Spice
1 gallon of Apple Cider
1/4 cup brown sugar
1 orange, quartered.
Combine
the above ingredients and cook in crockpot for 6+ hours.
Remove from crockpot, place on a rack in a roasting
pan and allow to sit for 15+ minutes while you make
the following glaze:
2
Cups prepared Mustard
1/2 cup Brown Sugar
2 tsp+ (to taste) ground clove
Mix
ingredients thoroughly and coat roast with glaze. Reserve
remaining glaze mix to pass at the table as a sauce.
Roast glazed venison for 30 minutes at 350 degrees.
(note:
The above recipe also works for corned beef. Use water
instead of Apple Cider, sugar and Orange. Corned Beef
is usually sold with a packet of pickling spices)
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Crockpot
Elk or Venison
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This
recipe is perfect for tough cuts of meat. After it has
cooked it can be used in many different dishes. Two
of our favorites are as 'elk dip' or the meat can be
shredded and added to barbecue sauce.
4-5
lbs. venison or elk brisket
2-3 Tbs. vinegar
1 Tbs. liquid smoke
A little oil
Salt & pepper
Dried garlic & dried onion
Marinate
meat with all the above ingredients (may be marinated
overnight). Pour 2 cups water in bottom of crockpot,
then place the meat tightly wrapped in heavy duty aluminum
foil including all the marinade as well, into the crockpot.
Cook all day, at least 8 hours. Carefully remove meat
and drain off liquid, reserving. Slice thinly for 'elk
dip' using the reserved liquid for the 'au jus'. Season
with salt & pepper. If preparing barbecue, shred
the meat, add barbecue sauce of your choice, and small
amount of the reserved liquid. Reheat and serve on buns.
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| Venison
or Elk Jerky |
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This
recipe can be doubled, tripled or even quadrupled for
large quantities of meat.
About
2 lbs. of venison or elk thinly sliced
(much easier to slice when its still partially frozen)
1/2 tsp. season salt
1/2 tsp. garlic powder
1/2 tsp. black pepper
1/4 tsp. cayenne pepper
1 tsp. onion powder
1 tsp. liquid smoke
1/4 cup worchestershire sauce
1/4-1/2 cup soy sauce
Combine
everything, mixing well. Let marinate at least overnight
in the frig. Dry in dehydrator until leathery, usually
takes 4-6 hours, depending on the thickness of the meat.
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| Enchilada
Stacks |
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This
started out as a recipe for beef, but it worked so well
with ground elk or venison, we don't use beef any longer.
Serves 4-6.
1/3
cup rice (cooked with 2/3 cup water)
1/2 lb. ground elk or venison
About 2 cups taco sauce or salsa
1 (17 oz.) can refried beans
1 dozen corn tortillas
1 medium onion diced
1 small can sliced black olives
1 lb. cheddar cheese grated
Sour cream
Grease
a 14x17 cookie sheet & set aside. Cook rice, brown
ground meat, stir in 1/2 cup taco sauce or salsa. Refried
beans & rice to meat, mix well. Place 3 tortillas
on the cookie sheet. Layer about 1/2 cup of meat mixture,
then taco sauce, sprinkle with onion, olives & cheddar
on each tortilla. Repeat until stack is three layers
high, ending with a fourth tortilla. Top only with taco
sauce, olives & cheese.
Place
prepared stacks in oven at 325 degrees for 25-30 minutes.
Cut & serve with scoop sour cream & additional
salsa.
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| Chinese
Tomato Elk |
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Another
recipe that started out as a beef recipe and now is
used primarily with elk.
1
lb. flank steak (thinly sliced)
1/4-1/2 cup soy sauce
2 tbs. corn starch
1/2 cup peanut oil
3-4 medium tomatoes, cut into pieces
3/4 cup chicken broth (the canned broth works well)
1 green pepper (thinly sliced)
1/4 cup dry sherry
Cooked rice
Marinate
the meat in the soy sauce & 1 tbs. corn starch for
at least 1/2 hour before cooking. Heat 1/4 cup oil,
add steak & cook constantly stirring until just
barely done. Remove steak & drippings to a bowl.
Heat rest of oil, cook tomatoes, stirring gently about
1 minute. Add all but 1 tbs. broth, cook for 30 seconds.
Add pepper, steak & drippings, & sherry. Dissolve
1 tbs. corn starch in the 1 tbs. broth, push steak &
vegetables to one side of pan and add corn starch mixture.
Bring to boil, stirring constantly. Mix meat mixture
thoroughly, add more soy sauce to taste. Serve over
cooked rice.
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| Salami
Sausage |
5
lbs. ground meat (I like to use 3 lbs. ground venison
plus 2 lbs. of regular beef hamburger. If you would
like to use all venison, you should add a little bit
of ground beef fat, or the meat will be too dry).
5 heaping tsp. Mortons Tender Quick
3 1/2 tsp. mustard seed (this is the whole seed, not
the ground type)
4 tsp. cracked black peppercorns
4 tsp. garlic salt
5 tsp. liquid smoke (I sometimes add a bit more, depends
on how smoky you like it)
Mix
everything together in a large bowl with your hands,
mixing very well. Put meat mixture into plastic bags
and refrigerate for 3 days. Knead the meat every day
for a few minutes. On the 4th day, make the mixture
into rolls (makes 4-5 rolls about 10 inches long and
3 inches in diameter). Bake on broiler pan or racks
for 8 hours at 150-200 degrees. Turn every hour. Let
cool, then refrigerate or freeze.
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| Colorado
Venison Stew |
2
lbs. venison, cubed & trimmed of all fat
1/2 cup flour
4 tbs. cooking oil
1 large onion, peeled and chopped
1/2 tsp. dried rosemary
6 tbs. dried parsley
1 tbs. paprika
6 cups hot water
1 cup red wine
1 cup peas
Salt to taste
1/2 tsp. white pepper
French bread slices
Dredge
meat in flour. Heat oil in Dutch oven. Brown meat on
all sides, adding onion during last half of browning
time. Add rosemary, parsley, paprika, and enough water
to cover meat. Bring to boil, reduce heat and simmer,
uncovered for one hour, allowing liquid to reduce for
gravy. Add wine. Simmer another 30 minutes. Add peas,
salt, and pepper. Simmer 5 minutes longer. Serve over
French bread slices. Serves six.
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