Here’s one for your inner caveman: a whole roasted venison leg, just like Fred Flintstone would’ve cooked it. This is game cookery at its most primal and dramatic, and the results are a ...
When I was growing up, venison was a regular staple on the family dinner table. My father filled the freezer every deer season, and then my mother made her way through it the rest of the year, feeding ...
I ate a lot of venison when I was a kid. Any recipe that could be made with beef, my mother made with deer meat — hamburgers, spaghetti sauce, pot roast, and more. However, she didn’t ever get too ...
If you’ve got a stash of venison in the freezer, this deer jerky recipe is a smart way to use it. You don’t need a fancy ...
This Chunky Venison Chili is so very tender and it was made with one of the tougher cuts of the deer, from the rear leg. The trick is to brown the venison chunks over very high heat, quickly. The slow ...
A good steak, roast, or stew will always have its place in the kitchen. But as you’re about to learn, few foods are more satisfying to make and eat than hunks of meat that you’ve cured with these two ...
What’s the best way to serve venison? Stewed for hours in your slow-cooker or fried in your iron skillet? Basted with herb butter? Marinated in vinegar? Threaded onto skewers and served on a bed of ...
It could already be made up into sausage, ground up like beef, or maybe you’ve got some deer steaks just waiting to grill. My personal favorite way to eat it is as a venison burger on a donut bun. I ...
November ushers in the hearty Thanksgiving holiday, a feast largely centered around turkey. This month also marks a popular time for deer and turkey hunting in Kentucky. Modern gun season for deer ...
Nothing soothes the soul this time of year — especially considering our collective trauma of 2020 — like a warm, rib-sticking bowl of beef stew. One bite it all it takes to bring most of us to our ...