Maybe the moose ate the Eskimo
I doubt you would ever get an objective assessment of what part of Canada the tastiest wild animals come from!
I never understood (based on description alone) what it means by "gamey" taste.
It is one of the most abused and misunderstood culinary words, IMO. On top of that, it is extremely vague. In my experience "gamey" can mean just about anything, depending on so many factors.
I feed my family nothing but game meat; mostly Mule Deer, Moose, Grouse, and Snowshoe Hare. Surprisingly (to some) the one with the "gamiest" taste is the Snowshoe Hare. Nearly everyone who has ever eaten moose or deer at my place agrees that it is absolutely not "gamey". Many of them remark that lamb has a much more "gamey" flavour than the deer or moose.
Grouse tastes like chicken used to taste back in the 70's; like proper poultry. The "chicken" you buy in the store these days tastes more like tofu than poultry.
Snowshoe hare tastes like dark meat turkey, but with a slightly musky "wild" flavour that goes great with brown mushrooms and sage.
Having said that, there definitely is something distinctly "gamey" about the meat from a Full Rut Mule Deer Buck.If testosterone has a flavour, that is it! But is it more or less gamey than Snowshoe Hare, or lamb? There's no correct answer. They are all completely different and can be very pleasant, hell even delicious, if prepared properly.
Good post
And damn all this talk of wild meat reminds me.... I have a fresh pair of mule deer tenderloins from saturdays buck waiting for the fry pan... Mmmm some bacon grease, some shave pine mushroom, a pinch of rosemary and a lil dash of montreal steak spice just as the hit medium rare .... Mmmmmm I know what I'm havin for dinner with some baby potatoes and butter braised shallots![]()
A lot of "gamey" tasting meat is shot by people who don't know how to properly care for the animal after it's on the ground.
A lot of "gamey" tasting meat is shot by people who don't know how to properly care for the animal after it's on the ground.
The newfoundland moose, I eat is taken care of properly. Its a way of life down there people have been doing it for years. No matter what moose meat I get, or who its shot by and prepared by, it all tastes the same. Its awesome. Where as the Alberta moose, is much closer to beef imo. Its all in what your used too. Those that say different diet is the reason are probably right. I just figured their had to be someone on here, from Newfoundland or who has at least tried both types of moose, both Newfoundland and Alberta who will know what im talking about.
I've had both, but the Alberta meat was jerky or pepperoni (I can't quite remember for sure), and wasn't much of a sample to find a difference. Send me more, and I will see if I can figure it out for ya.![]()



























