I will also PM you this recipe
Wild game ragout: This recipe has been in my family for many years. Sharing it brings me much satisfaction.
Assuming you are serving approximately 8 to 12 people (which is a normal Sunday afternoon in an Italian household like mine).
N.B. REMEMBER THAT THIS IS VERY LONG TO PREPARE, SO DOING SO THE DAY BEFORE AND REHEATING IT THE FOLLOWING DAY IS A GOOD IDEA.
Step one:
If you are using canned tomatoes, at least 5 to 8 cans. If you are using fresh tomatoes you will need at least 18 tomatoes. The trick is to have at least 3 litre if tomato fluid once you are done.
Procedure:
Take your tomatoes and pass them in a blender not to long because you do not want to make a juice, you want only to sort of crush them into a paste. Then remove the seeds. This is done because the seeds will give a bitter taste to you ragout. You can remove them by passing them through a “passoire”. . I do not know what the English term is for that (being from Montreal and all) but it is one of those things you use to make apple sauce or stuff like that. It removes the big pieces (like seeds) and passes only the thick, pasty stuff.
Make sure you have at least 3 litres or more of this stuff, and set it aside.
Step two:
Take you venison, foul, or any wild meat and make sure you have enough for 8 to 12 people. There is nothing wrong with having leftovers. Cut them up in serving size pieces. Remember that this is not a stew with small pieces of meat, but rather a ragout with large serving size pieces. There fore the sauce that is left at the end is used to pour over whatever you are serving on the side (pasta, rice, etc). Your pieces have to be big enough so that they look presentable in a dish.
Set the meat aside.
Step three:
In a very large sauce pan or biggest pot you have:
Cover the bottom with olive oil,
2 or 3 gloves of crushed garlic
Salt and pepper to taste
2 large unions diced (or shallots) equal to about one cup
½ cup of sun dried tomatoes chopped small
2 heaping table spoons of capers
Spice quantities are to taste: Add Parsley, Oregano, Basil, Rosemary, and Savory
Let’s get started:
Using high heat, heat the oil until all the ingredients and spices begin to sizzle. When the garlic begins to turn light brown put in all you meat and sauté the meat under medium to high heat. For about 4 or 5 minutes, continuously tuning it so that the pieces of meat do not burn in the oil put rather turn a pretty light beige color. Once your meat has sautéed, pour 2 litres of the tomato liquid into the pot (keep one litre on the side for later) and lower the heat to 2 or 3 (low heat) so that it comes to a boil very slow. The ragout must heat up very gradually, never quickly. Stir every five minutes or so to make sure that the meat and stuff is not sticking to the bottom of the pot. Once the whole thing has come to a boil, lower the heat to its minimum setting and allow to simmer for the next 6 to 8 hours. As the simmering ragout boils away, the fluids will evaporate so every 30 minutes or so, return to the pot, stir and add about ½ a cup of the tomato fluid. The end result must be a thick enough ragout that it can be poured over a side dish. If the sauce is too liquid, it will go through your pasta and sit in the bottom of the dish. You do not want that. Consistency is everything.
Optional:
Once the ragout is ready, remove the meat from the sauce and set the pot in the fridge to allow the fat to rise and be removed from the sauce once it is cooled.
The rest is easy. Boil up a large load of pasta or rice. Serve the meat separate from the sauce and use the sauce to pour over your pasta or rice and have some extra sauce on the table for those who wish to pout it over their meat as well.
Lots of bre3ad on the table and a nice tossed salad on the side, and you are all set.
Enjoy