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11-14-2007, 07:59 AM | #1 |
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Your goose is cooked? or not.
Okay I've got two geese in the freezer. I haven't a clue how to prepare them. Anyone want to share their favorite goose recipe?
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11-14-2007, 08:44 AM | #2 |
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What type of Geese?
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11-14-2007, 10:08 AM | #3 |
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Goose with a sauce pecan
4 (1 1/4 lb) boneless skinless goose breasts 3/4 cup buttermilk 1 egg 1 2/3 cups pecans, finely chopped 1/3 cup fine cracker crumbs (use seasoned of your choice, or plain, I like Ritz) 1/2 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons butter, melted Maple Pecan Sauce 1/3 cup brown sugar 1/3 cup maple syrup 1/3 cup water 1 teaspoon soy sauce 1 tablespoon cornstarch 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 tablespoon orange zest 1/3 cup pecan pieces, toasted Cook for one hour and fifteen minuets @ 375 degrees
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11-14-2007, 10:21 AM | #4 |
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11-14-2007, 10:22 AM | #5 | |
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Quote:
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11-14-2007, 03:11 PM | #6 |
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I personally like "smoked goose". Inject them with cajun injector seasoning and smoke for about 4-6 hours. You have to have water in the smoker or they dry out quickley. When they are done it will taste like a good cut of beef.
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11-14-2007, 03:25 PM | #7 |
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BEEF maybe beef liver I can say most anything right off the smoker with the water pan is good but a day later that goose will fly south on you unless you use a major amount of sauce
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11-14-2007, 03:54 PM | #8 |
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11-14-2007, 08:33 PM | #9 |
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Well Isaac your recipe sounds better than my idea to inject the goose with "duck" Cajun inector, dusting the outside with Tony's and putting it on my grill's rotisserie.
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11-14-2007, 08:34 PM | #10 |
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I have a water smoker. I love smoked meat, but Mrs. Morph says it gives her heartburn. What wood would you recommend? I have heard that mesquite is good for birds. I like pecan for my ribs.
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11-14-2007, 09:45 PM | #11 |
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Pecan. I used to smoke about ten at a time and make fresh bread and take both around at Christmas. Even people that would normaly not eat "game" loved this. The key is do not let the temp get high. This can really dry it out. You can smoke the fool out of it with very low temp and then put it in the oven to finish.
Season it at least 10 hours in advance. Another good way is to filet the breast meat and cut it in strips. Marinade it in something like Alegro or Teriyaki w/ red wine etc.. get some peppers(Anahiem, or Jalaps) get all the seeds out slice them into strips. Pepperjack cheese sliced into strips. Take the goose strips out of the marinade, place a piece of pepper in it, put the cheese in the pepper then roll it up in a piece of bacon and secure with a toothpick. Cook them on the grill and then go slap yo mama! |
11-15-2007, 09:05 AM | #12 | |
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Anybody here like to eat turtle on the half shell
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11-15-2007, 05:54 PM | #13 |
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Thanks for those ideas purpahurl. Isaac, never had turtle on the halfshell, but I do like turtle soup at Ernest's.
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12-30-2007, 12:14 AM | #14 |
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So Morpheus, did you cook your geese? Here's my family recipe that was cooked since before 1900 down in DeSoto Parish by my great-grandmother and continued by my grandmother till she passed some 20 years ago. (I wrote it down the way my grandmother told me and continue to cook it this way over here in Alabama.) My great-grandmother raised geese and this was their standard Christmas dinner. My Mom told me she never knew people ate something other than goose for Christmas until she went off to college.
To Cook A Goose 7 to 9 pound goose salt and pepper 1 apple, quartered 4 to 6 celery tops 1 onion, quartered, optional "Get a nice goose and cut off all the fat you can see. Wash body cavity real good and drain. Cut off skin up at neck. Dry off real good after he drips awhile. Put salt and pepper inside him and put the apple and celery tops in the cavity. "You need a roasting pan with a rack. Every so often lift him out and put him in the lid. Drain off all the fat. Put him back in the oven baking at 350°F for 18-20 minutes per pound. You have to prick the skin around the groin to let the fat drain. Be careful! It'll pop out at you. Can raise the temperature at the end to brown him good. Let him sit awhile before carving. "Get out the brown drippings to put in gravy. Make Sage Cornbread Dressing (recipe follows) and put it in the roaster to cook. You'll need more broth than the goose produces so use chicken. Probably the dressing will need basting. You don't want it stiff. "You can save the fat to use later for chicken and dumplings instead of butter. Louise (her mother) always put apple in the goose, but the onion is good too, either with or without the apple." Sage Cornbread Dressing First make: SKILLET BREAD 3 eggs, beaten 1½ cups milk 1/3 cup melted goose fat or oil 1½ cups flour 1½ cups corn meal 4 tsp baking powder 2 Tbsp sugar 2 tsp crumbled dry sage leaves 1 tsp thyme leaves 2½ tsp salt 1½ cups chopped onion 1½ cups chopped celery ¼ cup chopped pimento Combine eggs, milk & oil. Mix with remaining ingredients stirring only until blended. Pour into large greased iron skillet and bake at 400°F for 35-45 minutes. to make the dressing: 3 to 4 raw eggs goose and chicken broth 3 hard cooked eggs, chopped 1 to 2 bunches green onions, chopped Crumble up the Skillet Bread and add the raw eggs. Stir in enough broth to make it look like thick pancake batter. The goose probably doesn't have enough broth so use chicken. Add the hard cooked eggs and green onions. Bake until set in the pan you used to cook the goose. If you have access to a cookbook called Spirit of the Harvest, there's a recipe in it called Grilled Canada Goose which we've made several times. It's stuffed with a dried fruit/ginger mixture and smoked using either apple wood or alder wood. Goose can be domestic or wild. Becky |
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