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Thread: Moose

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
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    I'd ask Chef Google, and pick something that sounded good.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Marin County CA
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    I ate roadkill moose in northern Maine once. It was quite good. According to the locals, Canadians come down and drive too fast and often hit a moose, then the locals run out and cut it up and freeze it before it has a chance to go bad. Waste not...
    Sarah

    When it's easy, ride hard; when it's hard, ride easy.


    2011 Volagi Liscio
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  3. #3
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    Norwood, MA
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    Wait a minute, I thought it was always the " 'assachusetts" drivers that took care of the speeding in NH and ME.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Posts
    1,333
    Quote Originally Posted by newfsmith View Post
    Wait a minute, I thought it was always the " 'assachusetts" drivers that took care of the speeding in NH and ME.
    I've always hated driving long distance on any highway because inevitably everyone zooms past me even when I'm doing 10-20% over the limit. Then I read this joke by Jeff Foxworthy about Canadians driving way too fast, so I guess we do.

    I remember one time in the snow in the dusk, I was trying so hard to follow the others so I can have their tail lights as a guide, but they just bomb down the highway like their pants were on fire.


    p.s. I had always heard that hitting a moose by car is pretty much fatal as you knock them out on their skinny legs and their body crashes onto the hood of the car, crushing the occupants.


    p.p.s. anyone here ever heard of Fergus the Forager? He pretty much lives off the land, and that includes eating fresh roadkill. If I were an animal who had the bad luck of being killed by a car, I'd want my flesh to go to good use.

    I also found this on google while searching for Fergus: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3zMo1j4G7EM

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    around Seattle, WA
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    3,238

    Moose Stroganoff?

    I don't have experience in cooking moose, but I have cooked elk - used to get 15 lbs of elk meat for Christmas every year from a neighbor. Anyway, I found that I could substitute elk for beef in most recipies EXCEPT where one might consider the sauce "delicate". Lets just say Chinese broccoli elk (instead of broccoli beef) stir fry was not to be repeated.

    Elk Stroganoff was really tasty. So was elk chilli, elk stew, and the ever popular elk burgers.

    So I would guess that maybe moose would be the same for elk from what you've described. Elk meat is a bit stronger taste than your average beef cow, so delicate sauces would be overpowered by the meat taste. Happy cooking!
    Beth

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
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    Quote Originally Posted by bmccasland View Post
    I don't have experience in cooking moose, but I have cooked elk - used to get 15 lbs of elk meat for Christmas every year from a neighbor. Anyway, I found that I could substitute elk for beef in most recipies EXCEPT where one might consider the sauce "delicate". Lets just say Chinese broccoli elk (instead of broccoli beef) stir fry was not to be repeated.

    Elk Stroganoff was really tasty. So was elk chilli, elk stew, and the ever popular elk burgers.

    So I would guess that maybe moose would be the same for elk from what you've described. Elk meat is a bit stronger taste than your average beef cow, so delicate sauces would be overpowered by the meat taste. Happy cooking!
    Oooo...good to know! I was considering "Moose and Broccoli" or some such stir fry type dish! thanks... I'm not sure I have a full pound of meat in the package. I'll have to check. The pieces are pretty thin and not "stew meat" chunks. I usually do stroganoff in the crock pot - but most recipes call for 2 lbs. of meat. I wonder if I could put it in the slow cooker with 1 pound of beef and mix it up some??

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Posts
    257
    This was a really timely thread for me as I too was given some moose- I think it is moose steaks and I was wondering about marinading them- thanks for the ideas
    The cure for anything is salt water;
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    Isak Dinesen

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Posts
    1,333
    I was talking to the coworker who hunts moose and how he prepares his meat. He said he likes to roast it, but you have to do it in a clay baker, or at the very least a roasting pot with a lid to keep the moisture in.

    He gave me some ground moose meat today to try it out. I wonder if I can make shepherd's pie out of it??

 

 

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