Free: Contests & Raffles.
Hassenpfeffer!
Quote from: lokidog on December 17, 2012, 11:42:58 AMHassenpfeffer! Loki is wise..... one of my favorites.Rinella did an episode where he used gingerbread cookies to thicken which I"m going to have to try as my receipes are all old-German.Use it almost exactly like chicken as a protein and you'll be good.
Save them for crab bait. Yuk.
Quote from: NRA4LIFE on December 17, 2012, 12:57:28 PMSave them for crab bait. Yuk.I would agree with this if they were wild rabbit's. But farm raised meat rabbit is almost like eating chicken.
Quote from: Bigshooter on December 17, 2012, 01:44:55 PMQuote from: NRA4LIFE on December 17, 2012, 12:57:28 PMSave them for crab bait. Yuk.I would agree with this if they were wild rabbit's. But farm raised meat rabbit is almost like eating chicken.What? Wild rabbit is great however I cook it, and I am not even a good cook!
Wild rabbit is great. It's never stringy or tough when cooked properly.Sent from my DROID X2 using Tapatalk 2
Quote from: superdown on December 18, 2012, 08:36:06 AMWild rabbit is great. It's never stringy or tough when cooked properly.Sent from my DROID X2 using Tapatalk 2I would never in a million years call wild rabbit great.If you consider slow coking proper then you are right. But you are not going to fry a wild rabbit and have it be as tender as a farm raised rabbit. You can slow cook boot leather all day and it will be tender.
Thanks for all the ideas guys I am definatly interested in the hassenpfeffer. I also plan on lots of roasting with peppers and potatoes out of my garden and I just gotta say Ive never had a rabbit wild or domestic that I did not like but I have also never had Jack rabbit.
Quote from: Bigshooter on December 22, 2012, 03:40:12 AMQuote from: superdown on December 18, 2012, 08:36:06 AMWild rabbit is great. It's never stringy or tough when cooked properly.Sent from my DROID X2 using Tapatalk 2I would never in a million years call wild rabbit great.If you consider slow coking proper then you are right. But you are not going to fry a wild rabbit and have it be as tender as a farm raised rabbit. You can slow cook boot leather all day and it will be tender. My experience has been quite different. I have fried up most of my rabbit and slow cooked alot of it. I have fried it up while it was still twitching and it was GREAT I have fried it up after soaking in buttermilk for 48 hours and that is even better.But i cook two meals a day for 5 people for close to ten years now so i have alot experience cooking. cooking is my other great love next to hunting you can give two people the same ingredients and equipment and they will most likely come out with very different renditions of the same dish nothing substitutes experience or technique
Quote from: superdown on December 22, 2012, 10:54:32 AMQuote from: Bigshooter on December 22, 2012, 03:40:12 AMQuote from: superdown on December 18, 2012, 08:36:06 AMWild rabbit is great. It's never stringy or tough when cooked properly.Sent from my DROID X2 using Tapatalk 2I would never in a million years call wild rabbit great.If you consider slow coking proper then you are right. But you are not going to fry a wild rabbit and have it be as tender as a farm raised rabbit. You can slow cook boot leather all day and it will be tender. My experience has been quite different. I have fried up most of my rabbit and slow cooked alot of it. I have fried it up while it was still twitching and it was GREAT I have fried it up after soaking in buttermilk for 48 hours and that is even better.But i cook two meals a day for 5 people for close to ten years now so i have alot experience cooking. cooking is my other great love next to hunting you can give two people the same ingredients and equipment and they will most likely come out with very different renditions of the same dish nothing substitutes experience or technique WOW ten years ? You should probably challenge Bobby Flay to a cook off. My guess is you have never had a farm raised rabbit. An easy comparsion of farm raise vs wild is filet mignon to chuck steak. But with all of your experience I bet you make one helluva a chuck steak.