FoodBanter.com

FoodBanter.com (https://www.foodbanter.com/)
-   General Cooking (https://www.foodbanter.com/general-cooking/)
-   -   Hare tonight ... (https://www.foodbanter.com/general-cooking/76566-hare-tonight.html)

Peter Huebner 15-12-2005 04:11 AM

Hare tonight ...
 

Suze finally bagged her hare last night with the .22 (she'd been after it for
days). And it's been soaking in salt water since I can't get buttermilk around
here; this afternoon I made up a marinade from Yoghurt, oil and gin and tried
that instead. Now it's just gone in the oven.

It will be interesting to find out which way this will go <g>.
(Hoping for 'palatable'; this was probably a young doe rather than a stringy
old buck like last time).

-Peter

--
=========================================
firstname dot lastname at gmail fullstop com

sarah bennett 15-12-2005 04:24 AM

Hare tonight ...
 
Peter Huebner wrote:
> Suze finally bagged her hare last night with the .22 (she'd been after it for
> days). And it's been soaking in salt water since I can't get buttermilk around
> here; this afternoon I made up a marinade from Yoghurt, oil and gin and tried
> that instead. Now it's just gone in the oven.
>
> It will be interesting to find out which way this will go <g>.
> (Hoping for 'palatable'; this was probably a young doe rather than a stringy
> old buck like last time).
>
> -Peter
>


I had rabbit once, and I didn't like it- I have a feeling that If I made
it myself, I would like it more. What is your recipe?

--

saerah

"Peace is not an absence of war, it is a virtue, a state of mind, a
disposition for benevolence, confidence, justice."
-Baruch Spinoza

"There is a theory which states that if ever anybody discovers exactly
what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear
and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. There
is another theory which states that this has already happened."
-Douglas Adams

[email protected] 15-12-2005 08:52 AM

Hare tonight ...
 
Peter Huebner wrote:
> Suze finally bagged her hare last night with the .22 (she'd been after it for
> days). And it's been soaking in salt water since I can't get buttermilk around
> here; this afternoon I made up a marinade from Yoghurt, oil and gin and tried
> that instead. Now it's just gone in the oven.
>
> It will be interesting to find out which way this will go <g>.
> (Hoping for 'palatable'; this was probably a young doe rather than a stringy
> old buck like last time).
>
> -Peter



So its hare today, gone tomorrow.

I know... there'll be at last someone that didnt think of it tho

NT


Peter Huebner 15-12-2005 09:09 PM

Hare tonight ...
 
In article >,
says...
>
> I had rabbit once, and I didn't like it- I have a feeling that If I made
> it myself, I would like it more. What is your recipe?
>


Ah rabbit - I am rather fond of rabbit. Rabbit I do in a covered roasting dish
with some bay leaf and half an onion, at low to medium heat for 1 1/2 hours,
then I deglaze the roasting dish with some boiling water, add some capers and
stir in a mix of flour, sour cream and water until the sauce has the right
consistency.

Hare is a lot more gamy than rabbit. Juniper goes well with hare. My marinade
worked well in that it took the edge of the gamyness and it also tenderized the
meat some. I cooked the hare in the covered roasting dish with juniper berries
and some bay leaf for just over 3 hours at a low heat (155-160C) took the meat
out, deglazed the pan, added a generous swig of gin, pinch of salt, 2-3 Tbsp of
concentrated blackcurrent juice (Ribena), reduced a bit and thickened the sauce
with cornflour dissolved in water. Served it up with hot apple sauce, a jar of
cranberries, boiled potatoes and as a side dish we had lettuce with a simple
lemon dressing.

Came out pretty well for an improvised effort: everybody was quietly
enthusiastic and there wasn't much conversation around the table ;-)

-P.


--
=========================================
firstname dot lastname at gmail fullstop com

Bob Westcott 15-12-2005 09:28 PM

Hare tonight ...
 
If you check epicurious, they have a very good recipe for rabbit in a
mustard sauce. I made this last weekend and was quite happy with it.

Bob

"Peter Huebner" > wrote in message
...
> In article >,
> says...
>>
>> I had rabbit once, and I didn't like it- I have a feeling that If I made
>> it myself, I would like it more. What is your recipe?
>>

>
> Ah rabbit - I am rather fond of rabbit. Rabbit I do in a covered roasting
> dish
> with some bay leaf and half an onion, at low to medium heat for 1 1/2
> hours,
> then I deglaze the roasting dish with some boiling water, add some capers
> and
> stir in a mix of flour, sour cream and water until the sauce has the right
> consistency.
>
> Hare is a lot more gamy than rabbit. Juniper goes well with hare. My
> marinade
> worked well in that it took the edge of the gamyness and it also
> tenderized the
> meat some. I cooked the hare in the covered roasting dish with juniper
> berries
> and some bay leaf for just over 3 hours at a low heat (155-160C) took the
> meat
> out, deglazed the pan, added a generous swig of gin, pinch of salt, 2-3
> Tbsp of
> concentrated blackcurrent juice (Ribena), reduced a bit and thickened the
> sauce
> with cornflour dissolved in water. Served it up with hot apple sauce, a
> jar of
> cranberries, boiled potatoes and as a side dish we had lettuce with a
> simple
> lemon dressing.
>
> Came out pretty well for an improvised effort: everybody was quietly
> enthusiastic and there wasn't much conversation around the table ;-)
>
> -P.
>
>
> --
> =========================================
> firstname dot lastname at gmail fullstop com




Gregory Morrow 15-12-2005 10:07 PM

Hare tonight ...
 
....gone tomorrow...

--
Best
Greg ;-p




All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:42 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FoodBanter