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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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![]() http://www.chicagotribune.com/entert...18,1,976438.st ory?coll=chi_mezz chicagotribune.com Raccoon meat delights the down-home faithful, amuses the haute curious Illinois, it turns out, has bountiful supply of the critters -- and fans and foodies are gobbling them up By Megan Twohey TRIBUNE REPORTER January 18, 2008 "John Wilson stepped into the massive refrigerator at his home in northwest Illinois and removed a long plastic bag. Although clouded with ice, there was no hiding its gray and pink contents -- the paws, the limbs, the head. "This is one of the jumbos," Wilson said, holding the bag up for inspection. "We leave the paws on so people know they're getting a raccoon, not somebody's house cat." The raccoon hunting and trapping seasons are nearing their close in Illinois. And though it may surprise many who dine on deep dish and Polish sausage, the bandit-masked critter is turning up in kitchens across the state. A largely word-of-mouth raccoon meat market stretches from southern Illinois to Chicago's suburbs, spilling into Wisconsin and Missouri, according to hunters, trappers and self-proclaimed "coon-eaters." With special permits from the state Department of Natural Resources, hunters and trappers sell their catches, often for about $5 a skinned carcass, which can weigh in at a healthy 15 pounds. Customers turn their purchases into barbecue, stews and other dishes, updating a tradition that began with Native Americans and was adopted by pioneers. Over the last 10 weeks, Wilson, 59, figures he has sold about 2,500 raccoon carcasses to more than 50 customers. Irv Schirmer, a trapper in Marengo, has sold 300, catering to appetites in Chicago, Rockford, Joliet and Zion. They say many of their customers grew up in the South, where raccoon hunting and cooking has a storied past. But that isn't the only demographic hungry for the meat. Hunters and trappers in southern Illinois love to eat the critters. And some foodies from the Chicago area dabble in raccoon dishes. Minced raccoon even emerged from the kitchen of Moto, a cutting edge Chicago restaurant, where chef Homaro Cantu prepared it to look like roadkill, with a yellow stripe across the plate. "You have to overcome certain inhibitions," said Catherine Lambrecht, 48, of Highland Park, who brought the meat to Moto after purchasing it in Wisconsin. "But when it's prepared right, raccoon is really good." And they're really plentiful in Illinois, which has one of the most abundant raccoon populations in the country, according to the Illinois Department of Natural Resources. The agency estimates 2.5 million roam the state, with the highest concentrations in Cook, Kane and McHenry Counties. The bushy-tailed creatures with black pockets around their eyes make their homes in patches of woods near farmland and in residential neighborhoods. Without hunting and trapping, their population would explode. More bird and turtle nests would fall prey to raccoons, while the potential for spreading disease would grow, said Bob Bluett, a state raccoon biologist. But a spokeswoman from the Humane Society of the U.S. questioned the ecological argument, while other activists oppose all hunting. Nearly 15,000 Illinois residents have hunted raccoon since the season started in November, often using dogs to locate their prey on private farms and government-owned land. About 3,700 have trapped them, killing those that survive the trap. "I shoot them in the head with a .22 rifle," said Wilson, a towering trapper with a gray beard, as he ran a 2-foot-long knife along a freshly skinned raccoon pelt. Thurman Bentley and Andy Breadhorse of Carlyle are among the hunters and trappers who enjoy the feast. Breadhorse, 35, browns cubes of meat in a skillet before cooking them in a pot with barley and vegetables. Bentley, 79, prefers to barbecue them. The sweet, dark meat always brings a smile to his face, he says, especially with cold beer. "I'll eat a carcass when I want one," Bentley said. "The way I do it is just as good as any barbecue you've ever eaten." State law allows raccoon hunters and trappers to eat what they catch and share it with friends and family. Those who sell for human consumption need a Wild Game Food Dealers Permit from the Department of Natural Resources. Wilson, one of 43 people to receive a permit last year, sells the carcasses out of his home, about 30 miles west of Rockford. He skins and guts the raccoons on a metal contraption that hangs from his garage ceiling then stores them in the large outdoor freezer. A jumbo costs $5, an extra large $4, and a large $3. "We get a rush just before Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year's and the Super Bowl," Wilson said. Most of his customers are from his hometown of Freeport, but others come from Chicago, East St. Louis and other cities. They pack their trunks with hundreds of carcasses, which are distributed to other coon eaters back home, Wilson said. Rogie Williams, 82, is one of Wilson's most loyal customers. He lives in Kankakee but grew up in Arkansas, where eating raccoon was a common occurrence. His taste for it survived the move north. "I've eaten it for more than 60 years," said Williams, who bought 15 carcasses last week. "Why stop now?" Lambrecht was unaware that Illinois hunters and trappers sell raccoon. So when she and other members of an online community of foodies in the Chicago area got an itch to try the meat several years ago, she brought some back from the annual "coon festival" in Delafield, Wis .Lambrecht planned to distribute the meat to friends during one of the group's excursions to Moto, which took place weeks after the festival. But when Cantu heard there was raccoon in his restaurant, he insisted on taking it into the kitchen -- he had never cooked raccoon before. An hour later, he emerged with his creation. "It was a real eye catcher," Cantu said. "The fact that the dish looked like it was run over was really cool." ---------- Copyright © 2008, Chicago Tribune |
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On Fri, 18 Jan 2008 08:25:41 -0600, "Gregory Morrow"
> wrote: >"This is one of the jumbos," Wilson said, holding the bag up for inspection. >"We leave the paws on so people know they're getting a raccoon, not >somebody's house cat." ROFLMAO!!! Lou |
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