Asking this in relation to all gamey meat - we're talking the unusually strong or sharp tasting meat over the usual wild taste. At this stage I'm discounting field dressing of the animal as a factor, so the question is focused on methods of reducing unwanted smell/taste in the meat after butchering.
What do you do to reduce the smell/taste in the meat?
Things I've read so far.
- Hanging for extended periods
- Soaking in:
Dairy/yogurt
Salt Brine
Vinegar; Water/Lemon
- Pressure cooking
What've you found that works?
Edit - was staying ambivalent on the animal since I'm willing to mix and match methods, and am curious for solutions across species. In this case it's a pair of odd smelling/tasting grouse... meat smells almost exactly like wet dog. Way different than the usual taste/smell which I like... these smell exactly like an old long coated golden retriever that hasn't had a bath in a couple of years and has been out rolling in wet leaves. Birds were breasted out in the field, weather was cold so no issues with spoiling/contamination.
I suspect the cause to be snowberries - they've got a similar smell when crushed and the birds' crops were full of snowberries and snowberry leaves, so that would be a logical explanation. I'll have to get some birds feeding in heather or a different forest type and compare them - these're the first Alberta birds I've eaten so still figuring it out.
What do you do to reduce the smell/taste in the meat?
Things I've read so far.
- Hanging for extended periods
- Soaking in:
Dairy/yogurt
Salt Brine
Vinegar; Water/Lemon
- Pressure cooking
What've you found that works?
Edit - was staying ambivalent on the animal since I'm willing to mix and match methods, and am curious for solutions across species. In this case it's a pair of odd smelling/tasting grouse... meat smells almost exactly like wet dog. Way different than the usual taste/smell which I like... these smell exactly like an old long coated golden retriever that hasn't had a bath in a couple of years and has been out rolling in wet leaves. Birds were breasted out in the field, weather was cold so no issues with spoiling/contamination.
I suspect the cause to be snowberries - they've got a similar smell when crushed and the birds' crops were full of snowberries and snowberry leaves, so that would be a logical explanation. I'll have to get some birds feeding in heather or a different forest type and compare them - these're the first Alberta birds I've eaten so still figuring it out.
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