After being fed both for my entire life I agree 110%.
In agreement as well we make sausage with the white tail and the mules are steak and roasts.
After being fed both for my entire life I agree 110%.
Think that has to do with the amount of grains the prairie game get over the mountain animals?
edit to add; just remembered the very best tasting wild deer meat I have ever had was Sitka Blacktail from the Queen Charlotte Islands the grain of the meat even on the largest deer was very small and due to the amount of seaweed/salt intake the meat always had an excellent non-gamey taste.
The old saying, "You are what you eat," certainly applies to the flavour of meats, wild or cultivated. Yes, the grain many whitetail deer feed on helps make delicious meat. By grain, I mean the usual wheat, oats or barley. I don't know about rape,--oops, I mean canola!
At one time flax was a major crop in the part of the boonedocks I grew up in. The deer that had fed all fall on the flax crops tasted so much like linseed oil that the meat could not be eaten.
I'm also a firm believer in the cold country theory. Short summers, lots of animal feed, not much time to lay on a huge amout of fat, to see the animal through the long, hard winter. The moose, especially, properly butcherd in the fall= perfect meat. But, the bulls must be shot before the rut, like no later than middle of September, or you won't have this choice meat.
I have told of eating a steak in northern BC, from a moose shot in late February and it was great tasting. However, I should add that this was an Indian shot moose, so may have been from their favourite animal, a pregnant cow.