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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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x-no-archive: yes
http://www.jamisonfarms.com/jamisonfarms/ I'd like to try some decent ELK MEAT? Ever had it? Is this a good supplier or should I go somewhere else? - Troy Mangum |
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Troy Mangum wrote:
> x-no-archive: yes > http://www.jamisonfarms.com/jamisonfarms/ >=20 > I'd like to try some decent ELK MEAT? >=20 > Ever had it? Is this a good supplier or should I go somewhere else? >=20 > - Troy Mangum >=20 I've never had farm raised Elk. If it's anything like the difference=20 in farm raised venison vs wild or farm raised turkeys vs wild then=20 it'll be like night and day. But it'll give you a clue if you like it=20 or not. Personally, I prefer the wild animals but you may not. I say try it, you may like it. If it's like venison, and I think that it will be, it's going to be=20 very lean. Try to saut=E9 it in a little butter/oil over a high heat=20 with a little S&P until med-rare and see what you think. Then take if=20 from there. Like it? then continue. Don't like it? Stop. ;-) --=20 Steve Ever wonder about those people who spend $2.00 apiece on those little bottles of Evian water? Try spelling Evian backwards... |
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Troy Mangum wrote:
> x-no-archive: yes > http://www.jamisonfarms.com/jamisonfarms/ > > I'd like to try some decent ELK MEAT? > > Ever had it? Is this a good supplier or should I go somewhere else? > > - Troy Mangum > I like Elk, but I've only had wild never farmed. It has a stonger flavor than beef and is very lean. I like it cooked medium rare in either butter or bacon grease with a little onion, garlic and shallot. Jessica |
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Yes, I have had elk meat before. The elk I had was wild game from
Colorado that my husband hunted for. I did like it. I have had venison(deer meat) and I didn't like it as much, but the elk, I would say is a cross between beef and venison. It is lean and flavorful. |
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![]() "Sylvia Rocha" > wrote in message ... > Yes, I have had elk meat before. The elk I had was wild game from > Colorado that my husband hunted for. I did like it. I have had > venison(deer meat) and I didn't like it as much, but the elk, I would > say is a cross between beef and venison. It is lean and flavorful. Elk is deer. Charlie |
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Charles Gifford wrote:
> > > Colorado that my husband hunted for. I did like it. I have had > > venison(deer meat) and I didn't like it as much, but the elk, I would > > say is a cross between beef and venison. It is lean and flavorful. > > Elk is deer. A moose is a deer too, but if you have a licence to hunt deer you had better not be caught with a dead moose or elk. |
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Charles Gifford wrote:
> "Sylvia Rocha" > wrote in message > ... > >>Yes, I have had elk meat before. The elk I had was wild game from >>Colorado that my husband hunted for. I did like it. I have had >>venison(deer meat) and I didn't like it as much, but the elk, I would >>say is a cross between beef and venison. It is lean and flavorful. > > > Elk is deer. > > Charlie > > yeah but elk and whitetail definately have different tastes, as do blacktail, muleys, etc. In this case, a deer isn't the same as a deer. ;-) -- Steve Ever wonder about those people who spend $2.00 apiece on those little bottles of Evian water? Try spelling Evian backwards... |
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My son in Alberta Canada hunts elk and served us an elk roast. He
marinates it for an hour or so and roasts it to beef med. then lets it rest. It has very little fat, but done his way it isn't dry. Delicious. Troy Mangum wrote: > > x-no-archive: yes > http://www.jamisonfarms.com/jamisonfarms/ > > I'd like to try some decent ELK MEAT? > > Ever had it? Is this a good supplier or should I go somewhere else? > > - Troy Mangum |
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![]() "Steve Calvin" > wrote in message ... > Charles Gifford wrote: > > "Sylvia Rocha" > wrote in message > > ... > > > >>Yes, I have had elk meat before. The elk I had was wild game from > >>Colorado that my husband hunted for. I did like it. I have had > >>venison(deer meat) and I didn't like it as much, but the elk, I would > >>say is a cross between beef and venison. It is lean and flavorful. > > > > > > Elk is deer. > > > > Charlie > > > > > yeah but elk and whitetail definately have different tastes, as do > blacktail, muleys, etc. In this case, a deer isn't the same as a > deer. ;-) > > -- > Steve Not everyone is as knowledgeable as you and Dave. Charlie |
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![]() "Dave Smith" > wrote in message ... > Charles Gifford wrote: > > > > > > Colorado that my husband hunted for. I did like it. I have had > > > venison(deer meat) and I didn't like it as much, but the elk, I would > > > say is a cross between beef and venison. It is lean and flavorful. > > > > Elk is deer. > > A moose is a deer too, but if you have a licence to hunt deer you had > better not be caught with a dead moose or elk. A moose is sometimes an elk too and, of course, the other way around as well. Common names are notoriously unreliable. I certainly would not hunt anything, as I find it barbarous, so I know nothing about licenses to kill. Charlie. |
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Charles Gifford wrote:
> "Steve Calvin" > wrote in message > ... > >>Charles Gifford wrote: >> >>>"Sylvia Rocha" > wrote in message ... >>> >>> >>>>Yes, I have had elk meat before. The elk I had was wild game from >>>>Colorado that my husband hunted for. I did like it. I have had >>>>venison(deer meat) and I didn't like it as much, but the elk, I would >>>>say is a cross between beef and venison. It is lean and flavorful. >>> >>> >>>Elk is deer. >>> >>>Charlie >>> >>> >> >>yeah but elk and whitetail definately have different tastes, as do >>blacktail, muleys, etc. In this case, a deer isn't the same as a >>deer. ;-) >> >>-- >>Steve > > > Not everyone is as knowledgeable as you and Dave. > > Charlie > > If that's a shot, it seems undeserved. If not, disregard. -- Steve Ever wonder about those people who spend $2.00 apiece on those little bottles of Evian water? Try spelling Evian backwards... |
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"Troy Mangum" > wrote:
My first experience with elk roast was when I was a child. My grandmother fixed it (my dad bagged it) and I remember being repulsed, thinking it tasted like spoiled beef. Man, how times change. We just emptied our freezer of the last deer steaks (no hunt this year) and 2 of us are pretty sad. My brother-in-law went elk hunting in Montana for about 10 years in a row, but his friend sold the place last year. The last of the elk jerkey is gone now, too. Oh, the pain . . . I honestly don't know if you can buy it anywhere, but I'm guessing the cost is way too high for the experience. Course, going to Montana to get it ain't exactly cheap, either. |
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![]() Charles Gifford wrote: > > > Elk is deer. > > > A moose is sometimes an elk too and, of course, the other way around as > well. Common names are notoriously unreliable. I certainly would not hunt > anything, as I find it barbarous, so I know nothing about licenses to kill. > > Charlie. They are all hoofed mammals, if that is as closely as you want to classify animals, but they are not the same, any more than sheep and goats are. Even a non-barbarous non-hunter wouldn't claim that a deer looks like an elk, looks like a moose. And if you had eaten them you'd know they are different, too. Their diet also makes a very big difference in taste. Deer from Southeast Alaska and, say, Wyoming won't taste the same. Aficionados know beyond doubt that the Sitka blacktail deer is the best tasting venison in the world. Aficionados is defined, of course, as our friends from Southeast Alaska. -aem |
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aem wrote:
> Aficionados know beyond doubt that the Sitka > blacktail deer is the best tasting venison in the world. Aficionados > is defined, of course, as our friends from Southeast Alaska. > > -aem > Well, it's certainly good but I'm not sure that I'd agree that it's the best. I guess it depends on your tastes. If however you have some you'd like to get rid of... ;-) -- Steve Ever wonder about those people who spend $2.00 apiece on those little bottles of Evian water? Try spelling Evian backwards... |
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![]() "aem" > wrote in message oups.com... > > Charles Gifford wrote: > > > > Elk is deer. > > > > > A moose is sometimes an elk too and, of course, the other way around > as > > well. Common names are notoriously unreliable. I certainly would not > hunt > > anything, as I find it barbarous, so I know nothing about licenses to > kill. > > > > Charlie. > > They are all hoofed mammals, if that is as closely as you want to > classify animals, but they are not the same, any more than sheep and > goats are. I prefer to be much more precise in mamal classification. > Even a non-barbarous non-hunter wouldn't claim that a deer > looks like an elk, looks like a moose. Not all deers look like other deers except superficially. I'll grant that the difference between the appearance of a White Tail and the average moose is greater than most. > And if you had eaten them you'd > know they are different, too. Their diet also makes a very big > difference in taste. Deer from Southeast Alaska and, say, Wyoming > won't taste the same. Aficionados know beyond doubt that the Sitka > blacktail deer is the best tasting venison in the world. Aficionados > is defined, of course, as our friends from Southeast Alaska. > > -aem Heh, heh! But of course! I agree that the animal's diet makes a huge difference in the flavor. I have eaten deer, though it was New Zealand farm raised. I'm not an Aficionado of venison. I'd love to visit Sitka, but probably wouldn't eat many blacktail deer. My best friend vacationed in Sitka and other towns in the general area a couple of years ago and loved it. He has raved about salmon ever since. |
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![]() "Steve Calvin" > wrote in message ... > Charles Gifford wrote: > > > > Not everyone is as knowledgeable as you and Dave. > > > > Charlie > > > > > > If that's a shot, it seems undeserved. If not, disregard. > > -- > Steve It most certainly was not a shot. It was a simple statement. I do not wish to be pedantic but the fact is many people do not know taxonomy. I just wished to toss in a bit of information about a subject I know well. I thought that perhaps someone would find it interesting. Charlie |
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Charles Gifford wrote:
> "Steve Calvin" > wrote in message > ... > >>Charles Gifford wrote: >> >>>Not everyone is as knowledgeable as you and Dave. >>> >>>Charlie >>> >>> >> >>If that's a shot, it seems undeserved. If not, disregard. >> >>-- >>Steve > > > It most certainly was not a shot. It was a simple statement. I do not wish > to be pedantic but the fact is many people do not know taxonomy. I just > wished to toss in a bit of information about a subject I know well. I > thought that perhaps someone would find it interesting. > > Charlie > > okie-dokie. Tough to tell without voice inflections and facial expressions sometimes. -- Steve Ever wonder about those people who spend $2.00 apiece on those little bottles of Evian water? Try spelling Evian backwards... |
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![]() Charles Gifford wrote: [snips] > My best friend vacationed in > Sitka and other towns in the general area a couple of years ago and loved > it. He has raved about salmon ever since. Shhh! We don't talk about the salmon. It's too crowded up there already. -aem |
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![]() "aem" > wrote in message ups.com... > > > Shhh! We don't talk about the salmon. It's too crowded up there > already. > > -aem <no sound other than Charlie zipping his mouth> |
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Charles Gifford wrote:
> > Elk is deer. Wild bison is cow, too. So? This is like saying goose is duck. Sure, they are both birds that sort of look the same. Elk does taste sorta like whitetail deer or like muledeer, rather like buffalo does taste sorta like beef. Mmmm, give me any of the above. |
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