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Showing posts with label pheasant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pheasant. Show all posts

11.1.14

Pheasant Cassoulet

With my oven still out of order I am experimenting more with stovetop and slow cooker versions of my favourites. Actually this is a recipe full of experimentation. I set my slow cooker to cook for 4 hours on high heat. This was the setting most appropriate on my cooker. I allowed it to preheat while I prepared all the ingredients.

Cassoulet is a classic casserole from the south of France. It is slow cooked and my favourite has a crusty top. Achieving this in a slow cooker is a challenge but not totally impossible. It usually includes a duck, goose or wild bird confit. It almost always has white beans.

After combining all the ingredients, I cooked it for an hour with the lid on. I checked it and found it to be quite watery so I removed the lid for about an hour. This allowed the excess liquid to evaporate and make it thicker.

Most recipes call for a breadcrumb topping. These would soak up too much moisture in the slow cooker so I substituted grits. I thought they might plump up a little in the steam but they didn't. They made quite a nice crust on the top.

I found a couple of wild pheasants in my freezer. I am always saving special things for special occasions but I have saved these long enough and freezer burn will soon set in. I also came across cacciatore lardo that I purchased from Salt Food Boutique in Regina. All charcuterie and sausages are house made.

The lardo is a curious looking sausage. It is uncooked sausage meat that is surrounded by a thick layer of fat or lardo. I cut it into cubes and browned it along with Pine View Farms naturally produced smokey bacon.
Now it is ready to add to the preheated slow cooker. I am setting the slow cooker on high heat for 4 hours. That's just the setting most appropriate on my pot.

 It 'baked' beautifully in the slow cooker. I carefully cut out pieces and transferred them to preheated cast iron ramekins for serving. Without an oven, I used a pot with a little water to preheat my ramekins.


Pheasant Cassoulet in a Slow Cooker

1 pheasant, deboned and cut in cubes
1/4 lb. cacciatore lardo
2 slices smokey bacon
1/2 onion, roughly chopped
1 c. navy beans
1/2 tsp. dried oregano
1/2 tsp. dried thyme
2 bay leaves
2 c. pheasant stock
1/2 c. white grits
3 tomatoes, roughly chopped

Add the navy beans to a pressure cooker and fill pot halfway with cold water. Place lid on cooker and put on stove top on high heat. When full pressure has been reached reduce the heat to maintain the pressure and cook for 10 minutes. Turn off the heat and let the pot cool naturally. Drain and discard cooking water. Add beans to slow cooker.

Meanwhile, prepare the pheasant, lardo and bacon. Brown lardo and bacon then add to slow cooker. Add pheasant to the same pan and when it is browned add onions and garlic. Continue to saute until the onions are soft. Add this to the slow cooker.

Add remainder of ingredients, except the grits, to the slow cooker. Stir to mix ingredients evenly. Sprinkle the grits on the top. Set the cooker on high heat for 4 hours and let it cook for about an hour before checking.

After about an hour open the lid and check how much liquid remains. If it is a lot, continue to cook for about an hour without the lid. This will thicken the cassoulet so that it is more like the traditional baked in an oven. Replace the lid and cook for another hour or until the pheasant is tender.

Serve with a green salad. Serves 8.


16.11.13

Winter Arrives Gently



The snow has been falling since before I went to bed last night. Overnight it was gentle and soft and there was only a light covering this morning. Without wind blowing, it settled on branches, leaves and fences. It is a warm day.


My plan for the day is to go skating with my brand new skates. The arena is a little farther than I want to walk. And besides, the sidewalks are icy. The roads are icy, too, and no one on my street even left their homes until mid-afternoon.

Have you ever had a Sunday feeling kind of day? That is today. Skating can wait. Forrest Gump and I have a date.


Pheasant Hash for a Snowy Day


Hash is best made with leftover potatoes. They hit the hot pan and brown bits form on the bottom and you scrape them up. The carmelized bits of potato, onion and carrot are rich. This is a recipe for those days you have no leftovers, only fresh.

Pheasant rillette is made from the confit leg and thigh. I used the same method as for my duck rillete. This is the  link to my recipe for Duck Rillettes

Pheasant Hash

2 potatoes, cubed
2 carrots, cubed
1/2 onion, coarsely chopped
whole peppercorns
fresh sage
smoked sea salt
morasch chilies
pheasant rillettes
olive oil

Heat cast iron pan over medium heat. Add oil to cover bottom and saute onions until clear. Add potatoes and carrots. Stir to mix. Add 1/4 c. water and cover with lid. Steam to soften. Cook until tender. Cool.

When cooled, heat the pan again on medium high and add a couple of tablespoons of olive oil. Add seasonings. Stir up the crispy bits. Add 1/4 cup pheasant rillettes. Serve hot with a fried egg.

6.11.13

The Canadian Harvest as seen on the Prairies

Harvest has many faces on the prairies. Until last evening I had fully intended to write only about the local grain and lentil harvest. However it is hunting season and my hunting guide friend called with a couple of pheasants for me.

When the call comes you must put everything else aside and move into action immediately. The birds were harvested just minutes earlier and need to be processed right away. Birds can be hung to age but I have not yet learned the proper techniques. I have never heard of anyone in this part of the country hanging birds to age so I have to learn through my blogging friends.

Last year was my first time since living on the farm as a child that I have to plucked and eviscerated a bird. It was a feeling of accomplishment that I could draw on those past memories to get the job done.

Pheasants have very delicate skin and plucking is a challenge. My hunter friend suggesting skinning the birds. Usually hunters only 'breast' the bird but I don't like to see anything go to waste and I want the legs and thighs.

I save the tail feathers because they are so beautiful. They make a nice addition to my Christmas wreath. I wish I could keep all the colourful feathers. Following the pheasant recipes I have pictures of harvest on the prairies.

So, the birds are ready and in the refrigerator. I separated the leg and thighs for confit and they are curing as I write. Tomorrow I will poach them in canola oil. Once prepared they will keep in the refrigerator for up to a month or frozen for 3 months. Confit legs can be served with a wild mushroom risotto. I like to make a sort of paté called pheasant rillettes and pack it into a ramekin and serve with fresh baguette.

The good news for the conservationist in me is that pheasant hunting is sustainable. I had not thought about it but only the roosters are harvested. That allows the hens to reproduce. Hunters can easily distinguish between a rooster and a hen. Pheasants are easily reared in captivity and released into the wild to boost the population. For those reasons they are a sustainable bird for hunting.

The Best Pheasant Stock and Soup Ever

500ml serves 3 to 4 people

THE STOCK

■ Raw pheasant carcasses or leftover bones from a roast
■ Per carcass: an onion (skin on, cut in half and pierced with 2 cloves), 1 stick celery, 1 unpeeled carrot, 2 peppercorns and 1 bay-leaf
■ Some water

You will have noticed that most of these re-cipes use breasts or pot roast a whole bird. So what do you do with the rest of the pheasant carcass or the leftover bones? I am a great advocate of making stock. So this is a two-part recipe - first stock and then soup. My granddaughter swears that the latter is a sovereign remedy for curing colds; and it is true that it is a sort of version of Momma's Jewish Chicken Soup. Whatever medicinal properties it may have, it is certainly perfect for a cold winter's day and everyone always asks for seconds.

Carcasses should be roasted in a hot oven for about 20 minutes with the onion, celery, carrot, peppercorns and bay-leaf. You will not need to do this with bones from a roast. Put the carcass, bones, juices, any crunchy bits from the roast and the vegetables into a large pan. Cover with cold water and bring to the boil. Turn down the heat and simmer over a very low heat for several hours with the lid on, tasting and checking water levels periodically.

When the stock tastes full and pheasanty and looks properly brown, and the bones have all fallen apart, strain into a large bowl, cover with cling film and leave to cool. Refrigerate.

The soup

Ingredients are per 500ml of stock
■ Salt and black pepper
■ 50ml-75ml (13⁄4fl oz-21⁄2fl oz) vermouth or sherry
■ 30g (1oz) butter
■ 1 diced shallot or red onion
■ 1 handful basmati rice
■ 1 large diced carrot
■ 1 small potato peeled and diced
■ 2 sticks chopped celery (or 1⁄2 bulb fennel)
■ Handful finely chopped parsley

Skim any fat off the cold stock, then heat it. Taste and add salt as needed and the vermouth. Bring to the boil for 3-5 minutes; when the alcohol has evaporated, keep it simmering. In a separate pan, melt the butter, add the onion and rice and then season. Sweat over a low heat with the lid on until the onion is soft, then add the rest of the veg. Now pour in a little stock and bubble furiously for a minute; then add the remaining stock and boil until the rice is cooked but still a bit nutty. Taste and season again and stir in all the chopped parsley.

Serve with crusty hot bread and butter. This is perfect for wide-necked thermoses.Pheasant recipes: The top 10

Read more at http://www.thefield.co.uk/food/game/531237/Top_10_Pheasant_recipes_The_Best_Pheasant_Stock_and_Soup_Ever.html#PDoyUCigkOYQs8Cu.99

The Best Pheasant Stock and Soup Ever

500ml serves 3 to 4 people

THE STOCK

■ Raw pheasant carcasses or leftover bones from a roast
■ Per carcass: an onion (skin on, cut in half and pierced with 2 cloves), 1 stick celery, 1 unpeeled carrot, 2 peppercorns and 1 bay-leaf
■ Some water

You will have noticed that most of these re-cipes use breasts or pot roast a whole bird. So what do you do with the rest of the pheasant carcass or the leftover bones? I am a great advocate of making stock. So this is a two-part recipe - first stock and then soup. My granddaughter swears that the latter is a sovereign remedy for curing colds; and it is true that it is a sort of version of Momma's Jewish Chicken Soup. Whatever medicinal properties it may have, it is certainly perfect for a cold winter's day and everyone always asks for seconds.

Carcasses should be roasted in a hot oven for about 20 minutes with the onion, celery, carrot, peppercorns and bay-leaf. You will not need to do this with bones from a roast. Put the carcass, bones, juices, any crunchy bits from the roast and the vegetables into a large pan. Cover with cold water and bring to the boil. Turn down the heat and simmer over a very low heat for several hours with the lid on, tasting and checking water levels periodically.

When the stock tastes full and pheasanty and looks properly brown, and the bones have all fallen apart, strain into a large bowl, cover with cling film and leave to cool. Refrigerate.

The soup

Ingredients are per 500ml of stock
■ Salt and black pepper
■ 50ml-75ml (13⁄4fl oz-21⁄2fl oz) vermouth or sherry
■ 30g (1oz) butter
■ 1 diced shallot or red onion
■ 1 handful basmati rice
■ 1 large diced carrot
■ 1 small potato peeled and diced
■ 2 sticks chopped celery (or 1⁄2 bulb fennel)
■ Handful finely chopped parsley

Skim any fat off the cold stock, then heat it. Taste and add salt as needed and the vermouth. Bring to the boil for 3-5 minutes; when the alcohol has evaporated, keep it simmering. In a separate pan, melt the butter, add the onion and rice and then season. Sweat over a low heat with the lid on until the onion is soft, then add the rest of the veg. Now pour in a little stock and bubble furiously for a minute; then add the remaining stock and boil until the rice is cooked but still a bit nutty. Taste and season again and stir in all the chopped parsley.

Serve with crusty hot bread and butter. This is perfect for wide-necked thermoses.
Read more at http://www.thefield.co.uk/food/game/531237/Top_10_Pheasant_recipes_The_Best_Pheasant_Stock_and_Soup_Ever.html#PDoyUCigkOYQs8Cu.99 

Pheasant Saltimboca

Pheasant Saltimboca 

Serves 4

4 pheasant breasts
Black pepper
4-6 fresh sage leaves, finely chopped
1/4 c grated parmesan
8 slices prosciutto
olive oil


Carefully score the underside of each pheasant breast in a criss-cross pattern with a small, sharp knife. Lay the breasts side by side on a large chopping board covered with plastic wrap. Season with pepper.

Combine the chopped sage and parmesan and sprinkle evenly over the pheasant breasts. Lay two slices of prosciutto on each breast, overlapping them slightly, and drizzle with olive oil. Cover the breasts with a layer of plastic wrap, take a frying pan and pound them until they're about 1cm thick.

Heat a non-stick frying pan on a medium heat, then carefully transfer the breasts to it, putting them in ham-side down. Drizzle a little more olive oil over the top. Cook for 2-3 minutes on each side, giving an extra 30 seconds to ensure the ham is crispy.

Serve with lemon wedges and a crisp salad for a lighter dish or smashed roasted root vegetables for a heartier version.

Pheasant Stock and Soup

Stock
Raw pheasant carcasses or leftover bones from a roast
onion (skin on, cut in half and pierced with 2 cloves)
stick celery
unpeeled carrot
black peppercorns
bay leaf
water

Carcasses should be roasted in a hot oven for about 20 minutes with the onion, celery, carrot, peppercorns and bay leaf. You do not need to do this with bones from a roast. Put the carcass, bones, juices, any crunchy bits from the roast and the vegetables into a large pan. Cover with cold water and bring to the boil. Turn down the heat and simmer over a very low heat for several hours with the lid on, tasting and checking water levels periodically.

When the stock tastes full and looks properly brown, and the bones have all fallen apart, strain into a large bowl, cover with cling film and leave to cool. Refrigerate.

Soup
Ingredients are per 500ml of stock
Salt and black pepper
50ml-75ml (13⁄4fl oz-21⁄2fl oz) vermouth or sherry
30g (1oz) butter
1 diced shallot or red onion
1 handful basmati rice
1 large diced carrot
1 small potato peeled and diced
2 sticks chopped celery (or 1⁄2 bulb fennel)
Handful finely chopped parsley

Skim any fat off the cold stock, then heat it. Taste and add salt as needed and the vermouth. Bring to the boil for 3-5 minutes; when the alcohol has evaporated, keep it simmering. In a separate pan, melt the butter, add the onion and rice and then season. Sweat over a low heat with the lid on until the onion is soft, then add the rest of the veg. Now pour in a little stock and boil furiously for a minute; then add the remaining stock and boil until the rice is cooked but still a bit nutty. Taste and season again and stir in all the chopped parsley.

Serve with crusty hot bread and butter.




Now back to the fields and harvest.

 
This pile of durum stands as a pyramid on the wide open prairie. The bountiful harvest has been unlike anything ever seen. Along with the bounty comes the question of where do we store this grain. Some grains can be stored short term on the ground, but not all. 

In our region we farm grains such as wheat, oats, barley, flax and durum. We farm lentils, chick peas and field peas. The region of southwestern Saskatchewan is considered semi-arid and irrigation is implemented in many fields. However, the weather conditions were next to ideal this summer. We had a dry spring for seeding, a lot of rain and warm weather in the growing season during July and drier weather for harvest. The results were remarkable. Crop yields surpassed anything experienced at any time in our history.

Gathering harvest pictures is a task of mammoth proportions. Every day is different. The weather plays a big part. Farms are large, up to 14,000 acres and the harvest moves from one spot to another depending upon the ripening crop and the weather.

To give you a good picture of harvest on the prairies, check this link for a wonderful array of farm pictures. https://www.facebook.com/westernproducer/photos_stream



Another temporary storage solution are these giant plastic bags. Special equipment is purchased to load the grain into these bags. The problem comes in the spring when the farmer wants to seed this land and the grain stored takes a lot of space.




Giant pile of durum wheat harvested and waiting to be sold.




Tailgate Thanksgiving dinner during harvest.

This is a small grain truck. Mostly semi trucks are used now. Imagine the stress on the country roads with the huge trucks.











26.12.12

Glazed Roast Pheasant

This is another contribution to our Wild Night on December 23. I brined the pheasant and then followed this recipe from Hunter Angler Gardener Cook. It was delicious! There was more meat on the birds than I had expected. I served it with my home preserved Gooseberry Chutney.
We also enjoyed moose roast, venison sausage, spicy moose sausage and saskatoon berry pie with homemade vanilla bean ice cream.

My father has been collecting coins for as long as I can remember. Now he felt it was time to pass them on to us. We spent about two hours going through everything from Meat Ration Tokens from WWII, to shinplaster, Two Dollar American paper bills to turn of the century coins. Thanks, Dad! It was fun.

Glazed Roast Pheasant                    Hunter Angler Gardener Cook
Serves 2

1 pheasant, plucked with skin on
1/4 c. Kosher salt
4 c. water
1/4 c. maple syrup
dried garden sage leaves
1 tsp. cayenne
ground black pepper

Mix salt and water together. Whisk to dissolve salt. When it is dissolved, pour it over the pheasant in a plastic bag. Leave in refrigerator for 4 - 8 hours. Remove and pat dry. Let it rest on a cutting board while the oven heats to 450F.

Put sage in pheasant cavity and dust the bird with cayenne. Place sliced carrots, celery and onion on the bottom of the pan and place pheasant atop this.

Roast for 15 minutes at 450F, then drop the heat to 375F and roast for another 20 minutes. Baste with syrup. Roast for another 30 - 40 minutes, basing twice in the first 20 minutes. Remove pheasant if the glaze burns.

Remove to a cutting board and tent with foil for 10 - 15 minutes. Carve and serve.


Gooseberry chutney   adapted from blog Senses in the Kitchen

Makes 2½ jars, 190ml each

1 lb gooseberry, topped and tailed
1 large onion, peeled and diced
handful of sultanas
2/3 cup soft brown sugar
3/4 cup malt vinegar
1 tsp salt
½ tsp ground ginger
¼ tsp cayenne pepper
tsp mustard seeds

Place all of the above in heavy based pan and bring to boil. Turn the heat down and simmer for about 1.5 hrs. Occasionally stir, gently so you do not break up gooseberries too much. Keep an eye on it on last 15 minutes, stirring more often, so it prevents the chutney to catch and burn.

Place hot chutney in sterilised jars, seal and turn up side down. Leave it to cool down and store in cool, dark place. Allow to mature for about 2 months.

14.11.12

Pheasant Escabeche

First of all, thank you to everyone who voted for me in the Calgary Herald photo contest. I won! Yeah! Now I just have to find a way to pick up my cookbook! They don't mail it out.

It is pheasant season and awhile back I was showing off my prowess in dressing pheasants. I have been hesitant to cook with them until I found a truly inspiring recipe. The inspiration for this comes from a wonderful blog Hunter Angler Gardener Cook. Hank has several recipes for game birds.

This escabeche uses the entire bird. Everything I need is in my pantry. And it keeps well refrigerated for a week or more. The vinegar works as a preservative. I wanted to try it.

Even though it looks nothing like the escabeche recipe on Hank's blog, the flavour is amazing. It looks like a curry but that colour comes from the carrots in the stewing mixture. Directions told me to puree the mixture but next time I would puree only half and leave the texture of some of the vegetables in tact. I am serving this with a saffron and almond rice pilaf.

Pheasant Escabeche      adapted from Hunter Angler Gardener Cook
  • 2 pheasants
  • 1/3 cup olive oil 
  • lemon peel from 1 lemon, white pith removed
  • 1/2 cup sherry vinegar or white wine vinegar 
  • 1 cup white wine
  • 6 bay leaves 
  • 1 teaspoon dried thyme 
  • 1 teaspoon black pepper 
  • 1 teaspoon dried rosemary
  • 2 cloves 
  • 1 head of garlic, peeled 
  • 1 onion, sliced into half-moons 
  • 2 sliced carrots
  • Salt
  1. Cut birds into serving pieces and salt well. Set aside.
  2. Heat the olive oil in a large Dutch oven or pot with a lid over medium heat and cook the lemon peel in the oil until it browns. Remove and discard.
  3. Saute birds until nicely browned. Remove and set aside.
  4. Saute the onion in the lemon-flavored olive oil until just beginning to brown.
  5. Add the carrots and garlic and saute for a few minutes, stirring often.
  6. Pour in the vinegar, white wine, all the herbs and spices and bring to a simmer.
  7. Put in the pheasant and add a little water. You want the birds to be almost submerged, but not completely. Cover and simmer slowly for 90 minutes.
  8. Remove the birds and discard the bay leaves.
  9. Puree the sauce.
  10. Return it to the pot and bring to a simmer. Return the birds to the sauce. Turn off the heat and cover. Let the birds cool in the sauce for an hour or so.
  11. Serve cold, warmed up or at room temperature.


1.11.12

Hunting Season and I Scored Some Pheasant

It is nice to have friends who hunt. Kim and her husband actually raise pheasant to be released into the wild.  Her husband is also a hunting guide. As a result of the guiding, they often have more pheasant than they can eat before freezer burn sets in. So lucky me! I put in my offer to help them eat their pheasant and today when the phone rang it was the farthest thing from my mind.

It was lucky because I was home today and I was also caught up in getting ready for the market on Saturday. I was so happy that I had made my Saskatoon Berry and White Chocolate scones and I sent Ron home with a dozen.

These are wild pheasant and not ones that were released. You can tell because the farm raised and released are banded on their leg.


I have never cleaned a bird before but Ron gave me a quick lesson. Don't look too closely at the wings! I can hardly wait to make these lovely birds into something extraordinary. I kept the livers and hearts, too. I was amazed to hear that most hunters simply 'breast' the bird and discard the legs and thighs. I believe in utilizing as much as possible.

I have dreams of crystal clear pheasant consommé, braised pheasant with madeira, a lovely pheasant stew with risotto, pheasant pot pie and a wild pheasant terrine. Hmmmm....what should I make first?