GENERAL DESCRIPTION
GAME, which includes the meat of deer, bear, rabbit, squirrel, wild duck, wild goose, partridge,
pheasant, and some less common animals, such as possum, is not a particularly common food. However,
it is sufficiently common to warrant a few directions concerning its use. Game can be purchased or
caught only during certain seasons, designated by the laws of various states. Such laws
are quite stringent and have been made for the protection of each particular species.
The meat of wild animals and birds is usually strong in flavor. Just why this is so, however, is not
definitely known. Undoubtedly some of the strong flavor is due to the particular food on which the
animal or the bird feeds, and much of this flavor is due to extractives contained in the flesh.
When game birds and animals have considerable fat surrounding the tissues, the greater part of it is
often rejected because of its extremely high flavor. By proper cooking, however, much of this flavor, if
it happens to be a disagreeable one, can be driven off.
The general composition of the flesh of various kinds of game does not differ greatly from that of
similar domestic animals or birds. For instance, the flesh of bear is similar in its composition to that of
fat beef, as bear is one of the wild animals that is very fat. Venison, or the meat obtained from deer,
contains much less fat, and its composition resembles closely that of very lean beef. Rabbits and most of
the wild birds are quite lean; in fact, they are so lean that it is necessary in the preparation of them to
supply sufficient fat to make them more appetizing.
RECIPES FOR GAME
Only a few recipes for the preparation of game are here given, because, in the case of wild birds,
the cookery methods do not differ materially from those given for poultry, and, in the case of such
animals as bears, the directions for preparing steaks and other cuts are identical with the cooking of
similar cuts of beef. Rabbit and squirrel are perhaps the most common game used as food in the home;
therefore, directions for cleaning and cooking them receive the most consideration.
PREPARING A RABBIT FOR COOKING.
--In order to prepare a rabbit for cooking, it must
first be skinned and drawn, after which it may be cut up or left whole, depending on the cookery method
that is to be followed.
To skin a rabbit, first chop off the feet at the first joint; then remove the head at the first joint below
the skull and slit the skin of the stomach from a point between the forelegs to the hind legs. With this
done, remove the entrails carefully, proceeding in much the same manner as in removing the entrails of
a chicken. Then slit the skin from the opening in the stomach around the back to the opposite side. Catch
hold on the back and pull the skin first from the hind legs and then from the forelegs. If the rabbit is to
be stewed, wash it thoroughly and separate it into pieces at the joints. If it is to be roasted or braized, it
may be left whole.
A rabbit that is left whole presents a better appearance when it is trussed. To truss a
rabbit, force the hind legs toward the head and fasten them in place by passing a skewer through the leg
on one side, through the body, and into the leg on the other side. Then skewer the front legs back under
the body in the same way. In such a case, the head may be left on or removed, as desired.
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