Out of your comfort zone meat eating experience

To the OP, next time put that groundhog in the slow cooker, turns out good. Porcupine is even better....

I remember being told that Porcupine is great survival food.
They are one of the few animals humans are faster than.

You can kill one with nothing more than a big stick.
im assuming that cleaning it would be tricky, i know the belly has no quills.

ive shot a few but just jammed them down groundhog holes and covered in rocks.
 
OK but a bit gristly.

How was it cooked? I've cooked it a few times and it turned out just like head cheese for me. The first time I had some my BIL's dad made it. He was a trapper up north (part Cree) and he showed me how to make it.

Stuffed moose, deer or elk heart is my favourite.
I also love fish egg chowder.

I guess the weirdest thing (in my mind) I've eaten was prairie oyster. It's edible, but I wouldn't go out of my way to eat it again.


Other than the usual wild game, I've eaten:

Moose nose
Cougar
Lynx
Bear
Beaver
Squirrel
Muskrat
Porcupine
Snowshoe Hare
Muskox
Camel
Alligator
Kangaroo
Crayfish
Shark
Eel

Probably a few other things I've forgotten. Our local F&G suppers used to feature an "exotic" meat dish.
 
Crocodile was is pretty good if you have real crocodile not some ground up from whatever they can find on the floor burger. Tastes like chewy fish; or crap if you get the second one.

Kangaroo and wallaby can be very good; much of it tastes like deer with a bit of a wild taste. Some of it tastes like toxic waste, you might as well lick a battery then wash it down with gasoline. I don't know what some of them eat but it has to be poisonous. In Armenland you can shoot wild cattle for meat, but nobody will eat a white one. The red-skins are OK. The only possible explanation I can come up with is some types will eat a noxious plant that the others won't. I'd rather pound back 50/50 Draino and battery acid shooters that take a bite of a white one.
 
I tried groundhog once to find out it was like chewing on a tire. Other than that my experience is normal and I tried pretty much all the game meat. I've heard that pigeon is like chicken but since they carry so many desease it's a hard pass for me.
lol
The meat eater guy tried coyote, I will personally never eat dogs. I have to admit I never tried bear and never will, I just can't picture me doing it.

Share your experience, the worst game meat you'll never try too.

Pigeon is nothing like chicken! It's extremely dark meat and very strong flavour. It makes duck seem mild.
 
Pigeon is nothing like chicken! It's extremely dark meat and very strong flavour. It makes duck seem mild.

This. Also sold as squab in Chinese places. Very dark and somewhat organy tasting.

Wildest things I’ve tried were raw horse and chicken and blow fish while travelling in Japan.

I’ve also tried many of the above things snakes, gators, ostrich game meats etc
 
A friend of mine traps and i'd never tried raccoon, but have heard that lots of people like it, so when he caught a bigger one he gave it to me to try. Now i have no clue what i am doing with a racoon, so i watched a few youtube videos and read a bit and they all say to make sure you get out the glands of it will taste aweful.

It wasn't the worst thing i've ever eaten, If i was stuck out in the woods with only raccoons i wouldn't starve, but i'm not about to go out and get myself another one any time soon. Not knowing what to look for i may have missed a gland or two and that's what my problem was, but i'd want someone who knows what they're doing cook it right to try it again.

I have a wild game cookbook with a ton of raccoon recipes, let me know if you ever need some!
 
To the OP, next time put that groundhog in the slow cooker, turns out good.

I’ve eaten ground hog before and I agree, cook it right and it’s tender. My old man made a stew/goulash out of it, from what I remember time of the year makes a difference as well. Think it was late spring or early summer, when they’re eating lots of green grass etc.

Have eaten beaver meat and it was pretty damn tasty, the rear quarters have a lot of meat on them.
 
I've had all the common game animals available in Canada except polar bear and musk ox. Some good, some ok, some definitely a once in a lifetime experience. It makes a huge difference how some are handled and prepped and then how they are cooked. Here are my impressions of some of the more unusual ones.
Alligator. Tough, rubbery.
Black bear. Must have been on a clean natural diet, not garbage, rotten anything or fish. Tender, a little sweet, makes awesome sausage.
Beaver. Tender, fatty (greasy), very good eating IF the castor glands were removed when harvested. Avoid a gift beaver from a trapper. Beaver tail is like fatty gristle but chopped beavertail and beans is better than any store bought pork and beans.
Caribou. Early, before the rut is mild, tender and tasty. 3 -4 days after the rut starts ( they drink the cow's p!ss) it stinks the whole house up when you cook it, tates terrible, is onlynfit for dog food. Non descriminating dogs.
Cougar. Tender, looks and tastes somewhat like cooked pork.
Grizzly. Again, must be on a clean diet. Tender, succulent, excellent.
Lynx. Tender, much like dark meat on a turkey.
Mountain sheep. One of the very best.
Mountain goat. Mild flavour, like veal. One of the toughest things on the planet, even when ground it's like little BB's.
Rattlesnake. Sort of like chicken if you have a good imagination. Maybe in a restaurant, never again after handling one.
Seal. Fishy meat, leave these for the newfies.
Wild turkey. Was a big surprise to me, tastes exactly like domestic turkey but a firmer texture.
Whistler (marmot, groundhog, etc). Very fatty, mild lavour, a favourite of the indians in northern BC.
Wild boar. Like gamy pork only tougher.
Organ meat from ungulates is exactly like the same from the supermarket.
I'm sure I'm missing some but these ones stand out in my memory.
 
I ate horsemeat tartare and sausage. Both were fantastic.

I have tried a few oddities But these two stand out to me. ..... tried and like horse meat (won’t be rushing back anyways, but it’s better than I thought ), tried and liked beaver (yes the actual animal) and it was everything I was told it would be. Will eat again.
 
How was it cooked? I've cooked it a few times and it turned out just like head cheese for me. The first time I had some my BIL's dad made it. He was a trapper up north (part Cree) and he showed me how to make it.

Stuffed moose, deer or elk heart is my favourite.
I also love fish egg chowder.

I guess the weirdest thing (in my mind) I've eaten was prairie oyster. It's edible, but I wouldn't go out of my way to eat it again.


Other than the usual wild game, I've eaten:

Moose nose
Cougar
Lynx
Bear
Beaver
Squirrel
Muskrat
Porcupine
Snowshoe Hare
Muskox
Camel
Alligator
Kangaroo
Crayfish
Shark
Eel

Probably a few other things I've forgotten. Our local F&G suppers used to feature an "exotic" meat dish.

How did you enjoy the Lynx? I was pleasantly surprised, definitely will eat again.
 
When visiting family in Korea, I went to a restaurant with my great uncle. He kept joking around about trying 'Boshintang', which translates roughly to vitality soup. The main protein is dog. In South Korea, the consumption of dogs has been illegal for a while, I believe there was a push back in the 80's to criminalize the act to appear more palatable/civilized to the international community during the '88 Seoul Olympics.

Being a very high rank in the military, he had some connections and apparently knew of some back alley restaurants that served 'Boshintang'. As we parked and began walking toward the restaurant, we hear many dogs barking from a kennel which appeared to be located on the rooftop patio of the restaurant. My dad and I nope'd the hell out of there really quick.

At the next restaurant (without dog cages), I thought the plate full of meat was pork belly, turns out it was fermented skate fish. It looks like a stingray and has the unique trait of excreting ammonia from its pores. Traditional Korean preparation for skate is to let it ferment at room temp, and then eat it. The ammonia from the skin was so powerful that my entire face went numb, as if just coming back from a bad root canal. The most foul and visceral eating experience I've had.

As for game meat, I was lucky to try my roommate's grandmother's Moose stew. Apparently her signature meal, the moose was caught in Newfoundland and I honestly thought I was eating beef. It was excellent.

Some other uncommon meats i've tried:
- jellyfish (Chinese wedding, they cut it into long strips, I thought I was eating some glass noodles)
- shark fin soup (chinese wedding lol)
- horse
- live sea worm
- live octopus
- every type of fresh sashimi from the famous Tokyo fish market at the popular Sushi Dai

As someone who doesn't have family or friends who hunt, I've not been fortunate enough to try more local game meats. On the bucket list.
 
Not exactly out of the ordinary but I've tried fried crickets and some frogs in soup.

The crickets were heavily flavoured so it was not that bad.

Frog meat in soup is really soft and was pretty tasty.

Oh, eel is pretty good too.

One of my colleagues said she tried raw seal brains up in the artic before. Apparently it's a delicacy up there
 
I travelled to Mexico and a local farmer made a mole to welcome us. Actually tastes okay. If you could get farm raised pigeons, they are delicious.

I’m not sure if you’re trolling or not lol...

You know there’s no Moles in Mole, right?

Or did you mean he made you a Pigeon Mole?
 
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