Heym SR20
Well-Known Member
To be honest I think venison is better cooked on a Braii either as steaks or butterfly out a haunch. I am going to cook a haunch of red on Friday. I am going to make a good fire and rake out the coals cooking it slowly and turning regularly and it will be wonderful.
The meat that you would typically make a venison burger - flank, shoulder, ribcage I think much better used as slow cooked on the bone in stews, curries etc. I have just made the base for a large Biryani for Thursday evening. Shoulder of mutton and two forequarters of venison - ie neck shoulder, and ribcage back to 4th rib. All cooked on the bone with ginger / garlic / chilli paste, lots of onions, coriander, cinnamon, cardomon and turmaric. Slow cooked till all the meat has fallen off the bone. The lamb was a over a year old and with plenty of fat so everything is really juicy. All the sinews and connective tissue in the meat has dissolved to produce a really unctuous sauce.
To serve will reheat the curry, add ground garam masala, fresh chilli, coriander and mint leaves and ginger sticks and add part cooked rice with cranberries and a bit of rose water and seal in a pot. Stick it in the AgA for 45 minutes and let everyone else smell the wonderful fragrances. The rise will take all yhe juice and flavours.
I will take it to a quiet place and get fat. Everyone else can eat barbecued burgers.
To be honest I am really not convinced by venison burgers. Yes you can add pork fat etc but …..,
If you want a burger get fatty beef mince and do it properly. Most supermarket mince has no fat so makes crap burgers. Or you can make lamb burgers, but I am not a fan. Again better cooked whole.
The meat that you would typically make a venison burger - flank, shoulder, ribcage I think much better used as slow cooked on the bone in stews, curries etc. I have just made the base for a large Biryani for Thursday evening. Shoulder of mutton and two forequarters of venison - ie neck shoulder, and ribcage back to 4th rib. All cooked on the bone with ginger / garlic / chilli paste, lots of onions, coriander, cinnamon, cardomon and turmaric. Slow cooked till all the meat has fallen off the bone. The lamb was a over a year old and with plenty of fat so everything is really juicy. All the sinews and connective tissue in the meat has dissolved to produce a really unctuous sauce.
To serve will reheat the curry, add ground garam masala, fresh chilli, coriander and mint leaves and ginger sticks and add part cooked rice with cranberries and a bit of rose water and seal in a pot. Stick it in the AgA for 45 minutes and let everyone else smell the wonderful fragrances. The rise will take all yhe juice and flavours.
I will take it to a quiet place and get fat. Everyone else can eat barbecued burgers.
To be honest I am really not convinced by venison burgers. Yes you can add pork fat etc but …..,
If you want a burger get fatty beef mince and do it properly. Most supermarket mince has no fat so makes crap burgers. Or you can make lamb burgers, but I am not a fan. Again better cooked whole.