Anyone have any recipes? I am interested in trying it. I hear it’s a specialty in Newfoundland?
Thanks in advance
Roe+
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Anyone have any recipes? I am interested in trying it. I hear it’s a specialty in Newfoundland?
Thanks in advance
Roe+
Lots of good canning videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/results?sear...ing+moose+meat
Cubed moose meat into jar to the shoulder, place bay leaf on top, put lid on and follow standard canning procedure.
I've had 4 year old moose come out as good as the day it went in. Dump in a slow cooker with carrots, onions, and potatoes, add seasonings, and come back in a few hours.
And yes....not Newfie....but me fadder is.
Can (bottle) all our wild game.
Can make pre made soups in the can, comes out super tender. Just remember that the spices keep working the longer it sits a little can go along ways.
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As has been mentioned, there's a lot of recipes online. Ive done venison that turned out great just following basic guidelines for meat canning. I think the next time I do it, I may add some onion?
My dad used to make lots when I was younger. I remember it being really good. Almost forgot about it. I don’t remember seeing the recipe in my mom recipe book she gave me. Will check if I can find it.
That sounds like something I will try. A quick question, though. When canning raw meat, some videos say to add water up to the jar neck, others say to add no liquid and let the meat make its own broth when heated. Is one method preferrable to the other?
I would suggest you don't ad water? Plenty of juice will come out of the meat and I think adding water would dilute the flavour? Another important thing to remember is the risk of too much in the jar. If the juices overflow as its being processed, the seal will be contaminated. Dangerous when dealing with meat preservation.
I’ve read a few articles and watched a few videos, then found out the outfitter will assist us. I was thinking 1/2 tsp sea salt, 1 clove garlic and may be some onion per 500 ml. I would double it for a 1 litre jar.
Roe+
Doesn't need water, will create its own juice as it cooks in the jar. I put 1/2 teaspoon salt and about 1/4 teaspoon black pepper in pint jar. Have done moose, venison, beef and caribou, all turned out good and keeps indefinitely if stored in cool dark basement, coldroom etc.
Be careful boys! Make sure you have a ring on the girl's finger before you eat that mason jar moose meat around a woman. I had a feed of it once and it almost cost me my marriage. The stink that came out of me a few hours later literally made my wife vomit. At first I thought it was funny, then after a dozen farts I was asking God to make it stop. We're talking the kind of death stink that gets trapped in the foam core of a truck seat, then comes out to play even two weeks after you drilled the fart into it. I've be seriously warned that I'll be coming home to an empty house if I ever eat another jar of it! You young, unmarried lads can thank me later.
Remember guys, canned meat needs to be done in a pressure canner, the temperature of a water bath canner (100C) is not high enough to kill the bacteria that can kill you, this is a low acid food, pressure canning is a requirement to kill botulism spores.
The mason jar moose meat that I ate had been pickled with vinegar, then water-bath canned. It was prepared by a lad from Labrador. No chance of botulism spores as long as you use the correct amount of vinegar. It also had garlic cloves and a bit of onion in it. It was fantastic tasting and tender, but OMG it gave me a hot bum! Gas cramps so bad it damn near took my breath away. I stunk like an old hound that had a feed of green rotten tripe! I'd love to eat a jar of it again, then sit out with my buddies in the ice shack on a -25 day. I'd make sure I sat by the door.
You need the proper PH and you need it to get all the way into the meat, not just sit in it.
I was offered canned rabbit, they did it the same way forever, same place in the world as your pickled moose, but it was not pickled and water bath canned, I declined and told them of the risks.
I would not mind pickling but I would also pressure can, unless you do a batch and have it tested then you do not know what you actually have there.
I take my wares to the farmers market, have taken the safe food handling course and went over all the requirements for safe home canning, you do not want to get sick in this way, or worse, get your family, friends and kids sick, be careful.
Actually no, I didn't. After the third fart I asked my God to please just make it stop. I inherited my mother's colon. I can eat ice lettuce and deionized water and it will give me gas. Goose pepperettes, pickled leeks, pickled herring, smoked fish.......pretty much the same toxic effects. Not easy living with this God-given gift.....