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Barbecue (alt.food.barbecue) Discuss barbecue and grilling--southern style "low and slow" smoking of ribs, shoulders and briskets, as well as direct heat grilling of everything from burgers to salmon to vegetables.

Geese help pleeeze



 
 
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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 17-11-2003, 03:56 AM
Jack Curry
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Default Geese help pleeeze

Went huntin' in Louisiana this weekend and have some speckled belly geese to
cook, which is a first for me. Have any of you ever smoked a wild goose?
I don't know nuthin' about cooking a goose, so all suggestions are welcome.
Jack Curry


  #2 (permalink)  
Old 17-11-2003, 04:44 AM
BOB
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Default Geese help pleeeze

Jack Curry typed:
Went huntin' in Louisiana this weekend and have some speckled belly geese to
cook, which is a first for me. Have any of you ever smoked a wild goose?
I don't know nuthin' about cooking a goose, so all suggestions are welcome.
Jack Curry


Find out 'cuz I wanna smoke a goose for Christmas this year.

BOB
yer goose is cooked


  #4 (permalink)  
Old 17-11-2003, 12:49 PM
Graeme... in London
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Default Geese help pleeeze


"Jack Schidt$B%g(B" wrote in message
om...

"Jack Curry" Jack-Curry wrote in message
news
Went huntin' in Louisiana this weekend and have some speckled belly

geese
to
cook, which is a first for me. Have any of you ever smoked a wild

goose?
I don't know nuthin' about cooking a goose, so all suggestions are

welcome.
Jack Curry



I've found they're not as fatty as the barnyard variety but still benefit
from low and slow cooking, to let the smoke do its magic and to render

some
fat out (save), followed by amping up the temp considerably for the last
ummm....errr.....half hour? hour? (Helps with the skin). Fruit wood is
good, but hickory or maple does a great job as well.

Save the fat!! It's a really good high temp frying medium that adds

flavor.
Think 'schmaltz' and not the Lawrence Welk kind.

Jack

PS One more thing....you'll know when your goose is cooked.



I must concur with what Jack says. I cooked a goose a couple of years back
and made the mistake of cooking it at too high a temperature. The meat
released all of its fat too early in the cooking process and I ended up with
precious little meat remaining attached to the bones!
The goose fat is the creme de la creme as far as fats go. It is cholesterol
free and (allegedly) does not contain any saturates therefore making it
healthy. (So I read in a cooking magazine recently)
It works great while cooking roast potatoes.
Good luck

Graeme
(Whats good for the Goose, is good for the Gander)




  #6 (permalink)  
Old 18-11-2003, 10:33 PM
Jack Schidt®
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Default Geese help pleeeze


"Duwop" wrote in message
...
Graeme... in London wrote:
"Jack Schidt$B%g(B" wrote in message
om...

"Jack Curry" Jack-Curry wrote in message
news Went huntin' in Louisiana this weekend and have some speckled belly
geese to cook, which is a first for me. Have any of you ever
smoked a wild goose? I don't know nuthin' about cooking a goose, so
all suggestions are welcome. Jack Curry


Careful now everyone, looks like some of this advice is for domestic,

rather
than wild goose, very different creatures. One's got lotsa fat, the other
don't. If you love dark meat, you'll love wild waterfowl, cuz it doesn't
come any darker.
Jack, sorry, I've never been very successful with larger birds, damn hard

to
keep from drying out. I would expect the longer cooking times of bbq would
simply dry out the meat, and that there's not enough of the right type of
tissues to break the meat down. But I've been wrong before, and I think
we've seen someone post a how to for goose about a year ago, you might

want
to try google to find it?
I don't know, but maybe the 1st 30 minutes at a fairly hi temp to crisp

the
skin and then down to 350 or so till it's medium done. I do a domestic

duck
that way successfully. ( Julia Child recipe)
Most of the ducks I get out here are teal so I breast em and cook em in a
pan filled with wine and herbs.
Good luck


Jaysus, you bounced around the gazebo a bunch, so I'm not sure what you're
saying. Kinda like you think something ain't right but can't put your
finger on it...

Yes, wild goose is leaner than barnyard gooses but certainly fattier than a
chicken or a domestic turkey. If you can smoke a chicken you can for sure
smoke a wild goose. Just watch the internal temp (which I'm sure Mr Curry
will do). IIRC 155 to 160 at the thickest part is done. This is not an
overnight cook either. Relax, have a homebrew ;-P

Jack


 




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