Nick87
Well-known member
You got a pile of good eating there. How do you normally cook it?Now I need to find a way to enjoy eating them,probably my least favorite game to eat
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You got a pile of good eating there. How do you normally cook it?Now I need to find a way to enjoy eating them,probably my least favorite game to eat
See the Duck Prep thread in the recipe and wildgame section.First season really getting after ducks, lots of effort and lots of fun. Now I need to find a way to enjoy eating them,probably my least favorite game to eat.
Tried pan fried, Peking, cubed in tacos, the best has been slow cooked and pulled. It’s the livery taste I’m not keen on, I’ll always eat them but they’re bottom of the list. Brining has helpedYou got a pile of good eating there. How do you normally cook it?
Cube em 1" marinade in A1, worcestershire, brown sugar, garlic, and a little hot sauce. Put them on a skewer and grill or with veggies as kabobs.Tried pan fried, Peking, cubed in tacos, the best has been slow cooked and pulled. It’s the livery taste I’m not keen on, I’ll always eat them but they’re bottom of the list. Brining has helped
Medium rare is the sweet spot. Under no circumstances go past medium. This is likely why you are getting the "liver" taste. If it's medium well or well done its gonna taste like liver.Tried pan fried, Peking, cubed in tacos, the best has been slow cooked and pulled. It’s the livery taste I’m not keen on, I’ll always eat them but they’re bottom of the list. Brining has helped
Are you over cooking them?First season really getting after ducks, lots of effort and lots of fun. Now I need to find a way to enjoy eating them, probably my least favorite game to eat.
Negative. Searing for the most part, and if you wrap them in bacon then it’s not only masking the taste which I’ll do….Are you over cooking them?
Nice!I’ll start with last weekend. Snow and wind made for a decent water hunt.
Livery taste, I don't like liver either, and I like duck (with some exceptions). So many variables here, but it looks like your piles of birds should mostly be good eating. If your greenwing teal are still livery something is wrong, do you know what they're eating? As others have said I'd expect you're over cooking them, but even an overcooked greenwing teal shouldn't be livery. And I have several recipes with well done duck parts and it usually tastes just like any other red meat, but that's from good quality birds. Another possible source of the livery taste is if the bird is really bloodshot. Have you looked at Hank Shaws website and/or book?Tried pan fried, Peking, cubed in tacos, the best has been slow cooked and pulled. It’s the livery taste I’m not keen on, I’ll always eat them but they’re bottom of the list. Brining has helped
I second this, teal pretty much taste identical to dove from my experience.Livery taste, I don't like liver either, and I like duck (with some exceptions). So many variables here, but it looks like your piles of birds should mostly be good eating. If your greenwing teal are still livery something is wrong, do you know what they're eating? As others have said I'd expect you're over cooking them, but even an overcooked teal shouldn't be livery. And I have several recipes with well done duck parts and it usually tastes just like any other red meat. Another possible source of the livery taste is if the bird is really bloodshot.
Someone will chime in saying doves taste livery.I second this, teal pretty much taste identical to dove from my experience.
More for us.Someone will chime in saying doves taste livery.
I haven’t yet, I’m not a cook myself. The mrs steps in for the most part, and you’re right there’s some that better than others but it’s typically a mixed bag of birds when we cook.Livery taste, I don't like liver either, and I like duck (with some exceptions). So many variables here, but it looks like your piles of birds should mostly be good eating. If your greenwing teal are still livery something is wrong, do you know what they're eating? As others have said I'd expect you're over cooking them, but even an overcooked greenwing teal shouldn't be livery. And I have several recipes with well done duck parts and it usually tastes just like any other red meat, but that's from good quality birds. Another possible source of the livery taste is if the bird is really bloodshot. Have you looked at Hank Shaws website and/or book?
I'd be ecstatic, a drake wigeon has proven to be my white whale. Had a group come in this year, lighting was such you couldn't really pick out the drakes. I doubled with my citori, there lay two hens.Only one today but it's my first widgeon so pretty happy with it.
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Excellent, great pic.Only one today but it's my first widgeon so pretty happy with it.
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The mixed bag cooking may be part of the problem. Teal take about half the time as a mallard or pintail to cook whole, wigeon are somewhere in between depending on there size. As jrabq said they are probably being overcooked. It's also good to pay attention to the different species and how to cook them.I haven’t yet, I’m not a cook myself. The mrs steps in for the most part, and you’re right there’s some that better than others but it’s typically a mixed bag of birds when we cook.