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I've had two meaty legs of wild hare in the freezer for a while. I was
fascinated when I found them at a gourmet food store, but have been unsure how to use them. Tonight I'm taking a punt. After much research, I'm combining two different recipes. One has me marinating the meat in a combination of white wine, garlic, lemon juice, pinch cayenne, 1Tbsp oil, salt and pepper for 3-6 hours. This I've done. It goes on to cook the meat with the marinade, onions and celery. This I haven't done. Instead, I drained the meat of its marinade, patted it dry, tossed it in seasoned flour and browned it, and two rashers of chopped bacon, in a cast iron pan. Transferred meat to casserole dish. Caramelised sliced onion in pan. Transferred to casserole. Added a bit of flour to pan, cooked it out a little, added chicken stock, red wine, bay leaves, a little bit of cloves (sounded odd, but I thought I'd try it) and extra pepper. It's in the oven, cooking slowly for 3 hours. Don't know what it will taste like but it smells good. Unlike when I cut up the meat. It was quite off putting, but from research, hare should be soaked in a water/white vinegar mixture. I reckon the marinade will do the same job. Kathy in NZ |
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Kathy-in-NZ wrote:
> I've had two meaty legs of wild hare in the freezer for a while. I was > fascinated when I found them at a gourmet food store, but have been > unsure how to use them. > > Tonight I'm taking a punt. After much research, I'm combining two > different recipes. > > One has me marinating the meat in a combination of white wine, garlic, > lemon juice, pinch cayenne, 1Tbsp oil, salt and pepper for 3-6 hours. > This I've done. It goes on to cook the meat with the marinade, onions > and celery. This I haven't done. > > Instead, I drained the meat of its marinade, patted it dry, tossed it > in seasoned flour and browned it, and two rashers of chopped bacon, in > a cast iron pan. Transferred meat to casserole dish. Caramelised > sliced onion in pan. Transferred to casserole. Added a bit of flour to > pan, cooked it out a little, added chicken stock, red wine, bay > leaves, a little bit of cloves (sounded odd, but I thought I'd try it) > and extra pepper. > > It's in the oven, cooking slowly for 3 hours. > > Don't know what it will taste like but it smells good. Unlike when I > cut up the meat. It was quite off putting, but from research, hare > should be soaked in a water/white vinegar mixture. I reckon the > marinade will do the same job. > > Kathy in NZ > Thanks for the idea! There's a local butcher shop in montesanto that has rabbit hanging in the window...I've wanted to try it and needed an idea... <runs to train> -- "I'm thinking that if this dilemma grows any more horns, I'm going to shoot it and put it up on the wall." - Harry Dresden |
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On Apr 15, 6:56 pm, ravenlynne > wrote:
> Kathy-in-NZ wrote: > > I've had two meaty legs of wild hare in the freezer for a while. I was > > fascinated when I found them at a gourmet food store, but have been > > unsure how to use them. > > > Tonight I'm taking a punt. After much research, I'm combining two > > different recipes. > > > One has me marinating the meat in a combination of white wine, garlic, > > lemon juice, pinch cayenne, 1Tbsp oil, salt and pepper for 3-6 hours. > > This I've done. It goes on to cook the meat with the marinade, onions > > and celery. This I haven't done. > > > Instead, I drained the meat of its marinade, patted it dry, tossed it > > in seasoned flour and browned it, and two rashers of chopped bacon, in > > a cast iron pan. Transferred meat to casserole dish. Caramelised > > sliced onion in pan. Transferred to casserole. Added a bit of flour to > > pan, cooked it out a little, added chicken stock, red wine, bay > > leaves, a little bit of cloves (sounded odd, but I thought I'd try it) > > and extra pepper. > > > It's in the oven, cooking slowly for 3 hours. > > > Don't know what it will taste like but it smells good. Unlike when I > > cut up the meat. It was quite off putting, but from research, hare > > should be soaked in a water/white vinegar mixture. I reckon the > > marinade will do the same job. > > > Kathy in NZ > > Thanks for the idea! There's a local butcher shop in montesanto that > has rabbit hanging in the window...I've wanted to try it and needed an > idea... > > <runs to train> > > -- > "I'm thinking that if this dilemma grows any more horns, I'm going to > shoot it and put it up on the wall." > > - Harry Dresden- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - Apparently hare and rabbit are two quite different meats. Rabbit is classed as a white meat, whereas hare is red. I suggest you look for a different recipe, though the one time I tried rabbit (roasted) I didn't like the slightly bitter taste of it. Maybe it too could benefit from marinating. |
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![]() Kathy-in-NZ wrote: > > Apparently hare and rabbit are two quite different meats. Rabbit is > classed as a white meat, whereas hare is red. > > I suggest you look for a different recipe, though the one time I tried > rabbit (roasted) I didn't like the slightly bitter taste of it. Maybe > it too could benefit from marinating. Rabbit is extremely lean and needs to be braised. I basically oil it, brown it, and throw it in a pot with vegetables and some chicken broth, black pepper, bay leaf, garlic, rosemary and thyme and bake it at 325 for a 2.5 hours or so, with the lid on. I sometimes make hassenpfeffer the way my German family used to by flouring pieces, browning in bacon grease and then cooking in a big deep skillet, adding the cooked bacon (about a half-pond), sauteed onion and garlic, chicken broth, spices as above, some red wine, a dash of vinegar and some honey or kayro syrup as sweetener. Leave the top off and let the sauce reduce. It needs to simmer a good 2 hours for the rabbit to be tender. -L. |
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-L. wrote:
> Kathy-in-NZ wrote: >> Apparently hare and rabbit are two quite different meats. Rabbit is >> classed as a white meat, whereas hare is red. >> >> I suggest you look for a different recipe, though the one time I tried >> rabbit (roasted) I didn't like the slightly bitter taste of it. Maybe >> it too could benefit from marinating. > > Rabbit is extremely lean and needs to be braised. I basically oil it, > brown it, and throw it in a pot with vegetables and some chicken > broth, black pepper, bay leaf, garlic, rosemary and thyme and bake it > at 325 for a 2.5 hours or so, with the lid on. > > I sometimes make hassenpfeffer the way my German family used to by > flouring pieces, browning in bacon grease and then cooking in a big > deep skillet, adding the cooked bacon (about a half-pond), sauteed > onion and garlic, chicken broth, spices as above, some red wine, a > dash of vinegar and some honey or kayro syrup as sweetener. Leave the > top off and let the sauce reduce. It needs to simmer a good 2 hours > for the rabbit to be tender. > > -L. > It really depends on the age of the rabbit. Most domestic rabbit (as opposed to wild rabbit or hare) is butchered at a very young age. Definitely not a tough meat at all. It fries up like chicken very easily, in fact you can substitute almost any recipe for chicken to rabbit. Or pheasant. If you can find a bit older rabbit or a really large rabbit, then them make excellent braises and stews, especially with lots of onions and prunes in a beer sauce. Dollop of sour cream on top! Great meal, Or saute a rabbit with dried cherries and currant jelly. It goes great with fruit, though we've had a fun, tasty time using it in Mexican recipes and Chinese, too. But then again we used to raise rabbits and had access to LOTS of rabbit meat. Melondy |
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ravenlynne > wrote:
> Thanks for the idea! There's a local butcher shop in montesanto that > has rabbit hanging in the window...I've wanted to try it and needed an > idea... Hare and rabbit are not even in the same universe. Hare is gamy and dark. Its one distinctive - and unpleasant - characteristic is the extreme dryness of the meat. Its taste is all of its own and is very distinctive indeed. Not a few people dislike it, even if they like other kinds of game. It is nothing like the relatively bland, but otherwise very pleasant, somewhat chicken-like rabbit - there is no resemblance at all. That said, it ought to be easy enough to find hare in Italy, frozen if not fresh. It is particularly popular in Tuscany, where they make the wonderful pappardelle sulla lepre (with the hare meat being cooked into a sauce, so dryness is not an issue), but even in other regions, Campania not excluded, it is popular enough. If you need recipes, hare or rabbit, just say so. Victor |
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