Gerald Martin
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2009
- Messages
- 8,643
With that many people I would smoke a whole shoulder on the Akron, shred it and serve it as tacos.
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I do chili and biscuits. My chili is a hit with my family especially when I do it with elk. But people not knowing I was serving them antelope or venison chili loved it and came back for more even after learning what they were eating.Hey everyone,
I'm a new wild game cook and I have an upcoming dinner party for 16-18 folks. I have deer in the freezer and was wanting to give them some wild game. Wondering what you'd recommend I cook for them. None of them are hunters, and few will have had venison in the past.
Thanks,
CJ
Maybe with a Big Bomber green burritos .Hot Pockets
I would go with a classic that many are familiar with, such as meateater's venison bolognese recipe:
There are ways of easing people in to venison because, really, it does not and should not taste like beef or pork. All I am saying is don't go all Sweeney Todd on people and try to "fool" them into eating something they don't choose to eat. I would stack up my venison chops or braised loin with mushroom gravy against any feedlot meat anytime. There are always a few people who genuinely don't like any kind of food you care to name, even cheesecake (I know, right?). You will never change their minds. There are some who have had one bad experience and have no interest in ever trying again. You will probably never change their minds. But there are some who have always heard bad things about venison from people who don't know how to prepare it, or have a squeamish reaction to eating "Bambi". Those people can often be reached. Make it accessible, make it unique, and start small. Sitting someone down to a whole roasted haunch of venison is not the way to convert them. Neither is a heavily spiced chili that completely masks the venison flavor (note- as a long-term way of easing someone with an open mind into eating venison regularly, chili and tacos are great, but this is likely a one-time thing). Start out with a little meatball on a toothpick, or a thin slice of bresaola, or a chunk of sausage. Something that is clearly venison, but nonthreatening. Venison has actual flavor, and people are generally not used to that. As long as the texture is okay, they may be willing to give it a shot. If that meatball or sausage has a bit of pork fat included (make that clear as well, as some folks don't eat pork) so it is not like gnawing on a hockey puck, most folks will react positively, or at least not negatively. The long-term takeaway you are looking for, a year or so down the road, is "Oh yeah, I tried venison once. It was pretty tasty!"I get what you're saying "we're eating venison so make it taste that way" but I disagree if it's for non game eaters. If I had of tried that with my wife who was very apprehensive about it she would have clammed up and never tried it again. I eased her in with dishes like tacos, burgers and chilli and now she'll happily eat a steak.
The first hurdle is getting people past the idea of eating something wild. If you ease them in with something familiar you can sometimes quite literally see their guard go down and see them start enjoying it.
When you tell someone they're eating game for the first time you can damned well be sure they're scrutinising every mouthful. It's not about surprising them with what they're eating, by all means tell people, it's about surprising them with how normal game is. Serving up a plain gamey meat and saying like it or leave it and too bad is a great way to turn off some people.
My wife works with college student's and for several years during the winter months, we would have 10 to 20 students over for Taco Tuesdays. Easy to make, never had a complaint, and seldom had leftovers.
Perfect answerRegular food for the main courses with small samplings of braised or grilled assorted game presented with food picks or skewers....
Man, I need better professors.My wife works with college student's and for several years during the winter months, we would have 10 to 20 students over for Taco Tuesdays. Easy to make, never had a complaint, and seldom had leftovers.