something something predator that bares his fangs but feels guilty over his feral instincts with a prey who doesn't cower away and instead lays infront of him like sacrifice for the taking... does this mean something to anyone else
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something something predator that bares his fangs but feels guilty over his feral instincts with a prey who doesn't cower away and instead lays infront of him like sacrifice for the taking... does this mean something to anyone else
Was quite happy with the Zoophobia snippet. (:
Very Nostalgic.
My dad’s making deer meat rn…. I’m kinda scared because that sounds like something that could either make me face off a biblically accurate angel or it’s just bland and boring
Venison Stew
On this very chill Sunday, I am warming up in the kitchen, stirring and steaming my Christmas Pudding, and cooking this mouth-watering Venison Stew. I used to eat game often enough, when visiting my grandparents in Autumn and Winter, when I was a child. And I had missed the hearty, earthy flavour of venison. Thus, I was happy to find deer meat at the butcher's the other day. This comforting Venison Stew brought as much gastronomic pleasure as it did fond memories. Happy Sunday!
Ingredients (serves 3):
2 slices Speck ham
1 tablespoon olive oil
half a large onion
2 small garlic cloves
1 tablespoon olive oil
500 grams/1.10 pound venison (deer) stewing meat
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
2 small turnips, rinsed
4 medium carrots, rinsed
a few sprigs dried thyme
2 large bay leaves
1 teaspoon coarse sea salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly cracked black pepper
1 tablespoon plain flour
1/4 cup White Port
3/4 cup good, robust red wine (like a Southern France Fronton or a Barossa Valley Shiraz)
1 1/2 cup Beef Broth
1 heaped tablespoon whole-grain mustard
4 tablespoons
Preheat oven to 160°C/32°F.
Heat a large Dutch oven over a high flame.
Once hot, add Speck ham slices, and fry, about 2 minutes on each side until browned. Transfer to a plate. Set aside.
Add olive oil to the Dutch oven. Reduce heat to medium-high.
Thinly slice the onion, and stir into the Dutch oven. Fry, stirring often until softening and browning, about 4 minutes.
Peel garlic cloves, and stir them into the Dutch oven. Cook, 1 minute more. Transfer to a plate as well; set aside.
Heat olive oil in the Dutch oven.
Cut deer meat into large chunks. Add to the Dutch oven, in batches, to brown well, about 4 minutes on each side. Once all the deer chunks are well-browned, transfer them to a plate. Set aside.
Melt butter in the Dutch oven.
Peel and dice turnips. Cut carrots into thick slices. Once the butter is just foaming, stir in turnips and carrots. Add dried thyme sprigs and bay leaves. Cook, stirring often until golden brown. Transfer to the plate with the onions, leaving the fat in the Dutch oven.
Return deer chunks to the Dutch oven, along with their resting juices. Season with coarse sea salt and black pepper. Sprinkle with flour, and cook, stirring well, 1 minute.
Deglaze with White Port and red wine, stirring energetically until sauce thickens.
Roughly chop Speck ham.
Return Speck, along with reserved onion, garlic, turnips and carrots to the Dutch oven.
Stir in Beef Broth and whole-grain mustard. Bring to the boil.
Once boiling, cover with the lid, and place Dutch oven in the middle of the hot oven. Cook at 160°C/320°F, 2 hours. After a couple hours, stir in Quince Paste, and cook, a further 15 minutes, atr 160°C/320°F. (If the venison is not fork tender yet, you can add a bit of water, and cook a tad longer.)
Serve Venison Stew hot, onto Parmesan Polenta, Cheddar Parsnip Mash or Bay Leaf Kūmara Mash.
Okay so I call this Huevos El Bosque (Eggs from the Woods) my take on Huevos Rancheros.
Key differences are that it is sourdough discard flatbread with cilantro, instead of corn tortilla switching up the prairie grasslands wheat 🌾 for the Spanish corn 🌽 . For the the meat I used deer meat 🦌 that we hunted and butchered last season (slow cooked and shredded overnight) instead of beef 🐄. And then using a salsa verde to make the green colouring pop more with the avocado, to give it the forest vibes. 🌳 🌲 🌲
I probably would’ve added a sprig of pine needles for the final touch. 😉
I try my best to think of all aspects of a meal. The look, the taste, the placement and arrangement, the source of the ingredients. I’ve never been to cooking school but I understand beauty and food.
Sometime ago, I had some inoshishi ramen while driving around in Ide-cho, Kyoto Prefecture. Besides the boar (meat) ramen, they had on the counter a rather remarkable rejuvenating drink, ). I idin't taste it because I was driving, not for the fainthearted. They also served us cold deer sashimi, which honestly, I liked more than the boar meat. They also sell these types of meat if you're interested.
My uncle got a deer the other day, I’m so happy!