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Thread: Best Meat you've Ever Tasted

  1. #61
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    Exclamation Ruth's Chris is a chain restaurant??

    Quote Originally Posted by crashdive123 View Post
    Beef - can't remember which cut, but it came from Ruth's Chris Steakhouse.
    You mean that restaurant is a chain restaurant???? Of all the !!! Where's my bacon???


  2. #62
    Super Moderator crashdive123's Avatar
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    I don't eat at them too often - they're a bit spendy, but man are they good.
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  3. #63
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    I have never had wild sheep meat but it is prized in the west. I like all venison(elk, whitetail, mule deer, pronghorn) but like caribou the best. Made a leg of caribou on a rotissuerrie over mesquite charcoal a few years back stuffed with garlic, onions apples and herbs and basted with brandy and butter. Fire was started hot but allowed to cool to about 250 and the leg cooked for 6 hours. It was melt in your mouth fork tender and scrumptuous. I also like Bear and wild boar as long as the boars have a varied diet.
    As far as domestic meat dry aged (28 days) prime beef is hard to beat.

  4. #64
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    Quote Originally Posted by crashdive123 View Post
    I don't eat at them too often - they're a bit spendy, but man are they good.
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    There is one across the river here. I thought they were a local joint. Ok, I'll have to check that out.

    Weird name for a restaurant.

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    Quote Originally Posted by hoosierarcher View Post
    I have never had wild sheep meat but it is prized in the west.
    I've never had Big Horn, but Dall Sheep would be my number two to Mountain Goat. More meat on a Dall than most Goats. Years ago we could harvest Two Dall Sheep, Two Goats, Two Moose, Five Caribou, No limit on Black Bear, No closed season.

    If you harvested game in February through May, the meat was called Blue meat, as it had little or no fat. The dogs would eat it and if you were hungry, you would eat it, or you would eat the dog.

  6. #66
    Live bait. sobeit's Avatar
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    Elk, deer, squirrel rabbits, coon, goat, or a bone in rib eye cocked red in the center or med. I don’t think I would eat possum or armadillo. Possum because there nasty and armadillo because they are the Texas state mammal.

  7. #67
    Senior Member flandersander's Avatar
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    bacon need I say more?

  8. #68
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    Best steak at Drunken Jack's in Myrtle Beach. All around favorite breakfast. Thick sliced bacon, 2 eggs over easy, biscuits, gravy, jelly, potatoes, black coffee, 3 pecan pancakes , grits. Love that 1/4" bacon.
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  9. #69
    Junior Member KingFisher907's Avatar
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    I love Mtn Goat, and hopeak is right, proper meat care is key..myself, nothing Ive eaten has come close to DALL SHEEP...theyre just deeee-licious!

  10. #70
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tony uk View Post
    "
    Irish Stew History

    Irish stew is a filling, flavorful peasant dish made with the cheapest, most readily-available ingredients. The Irish raised primarily sheep and root crops for subsistence. The sheep provided wool for warm clothing, milk for drinking and making cheese, and eventually food. Potatoes were the main food crop, prior to the potato famine.

    Irish stew, "ballymaloe" or "stobhach gaelach" as it is called in Gaelic, is traditionally made of lamb or mutton (less tender sheep over two years of age), potatoes, onions, and parsley. Often, lamb or mutton neckbones, shanks, and other trimmings were the only basis for the stock. Yet, these would-be discards still held enough flavor after a long simmering process to do justice to a hearty bowl of stew.

    The root vegetables added further flavor and thickening power, as well as filling sustenance. Some cooks added turnips or parsnips, carrots, and barley when available. "


    Its basicaly Stew, made with the ingredients mentioned above, There are lots of variations from place to place but some ingredients are kept similer, More often however i see them add Giness to it, Giveing it a richer taste Mmmmmmmm
    As long as it has lamb I want to eat it!

  11. #71

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    Elk or King Salmon

  12. #72

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    elk is really good.

  13. #73

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    Wild raccoon, taken in the fall just before "hybernation", baked with potato, onion, carrots, and basted with the scent glands of a muskrat.
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  14. #74
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    Who on earth was the first guy that looked at a roasting raccoon and said, "Hey, wait a minute. I'll bet that would be great basted with a muskrat's scent glands."

    There had to be beer involved in that brainstorm.

    That's just nasty. Bleck!
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  15. #75
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    Yeah, I agree Rick. RR that's pretty frig'n gross.
    Best meat I ever ate... hmmm can't remember her name... lol jk.
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  16. #76

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    im a hillbilly and have eaten alot of fried young coon as well as groundhog. not a thing wrong with either, theyre good.

  17. #77
    Grubbin fer food Durtyoleman's Avatar
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    Roast wild hog basted with a mix of pineapple juice, orange juice, and black pekoe tea. Served with a large helping of cornbread stuffing and yams.

    D.O.M."

  18. #78
    Super Moderator crashdive123's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Durtyoleman View Post
    Roast wild hog basted with a mix of pineapple juice, orange juice, and black pekoe tea. Served with a large helping of cornbread stuffing and yams.

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  19. #79
    Very interesting... mcgyver's Avatar
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    Now this is an interesting thread.
    I was invited to a "wildlife buffet" for dinner one night. Terribly expensive, but they had a very wide variety of meats. All farm raised for the meat. Everything from Bear to Lion to Zebra (I passed on the Zebra). We later called it the Noah's Ark Buffet. I can't say I would ever go back again, but I did learn my favorite animal meat is Kangaroo.
    Great tasting stuff!
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  20. #80
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    Quote Originally Posted by crashdive123 View Post
    What time is dinner?
    Ain't been able to go huntin this year as yet but you bring the hog and I'll get the 55 gallon drum fired up. Oranges are on the tree and got the rest in house...

    D.O.M.

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