When in the Congo, that was all we ate, they brought no food to camp other than some veggies and canned soups etc. We had soup the first 2 nights, then I told them the next thing with fur was going to die, cause I can't hunt hard all day without protein............got a Peters duiker that afternoon and a Bongo a couple days later, so we were styling meat wise. Also shot several blue duiker for the pot, as the trackers and camp hands can go through an astronomical amount of meat if allowed to have free run. After 2 days of soup and cereal the meat was absolutely outstanding.............Eland is the best, impala is excellent, warthog is one of the best and waterbuck is almost inedible as is elephant. The waterbuck meat stinks and is tough and the elephant makes mtn goat seem tender, it is literally unchewable. All the small antelopes are tasty and not too tough, but as you go up in size the meat tends to get tougher, with eland being the exception. Buffalo is very good but only tried the best cuts, I suspect the rest of him may have been tougher than I would have liked.
The dining is indeed a very large and enjoyable part of the experience and every camp I have been in, one always ate what was taken in the field, usually the day before, but sometimes that mornings kill would see the pan that night.