hanshi
Cannon
As a youngster I shotgunned a good bit, but I quickly found out how much better a rifle worked. I don't wing-shoot and use a small caliber flintlock exclusively for small game.
I like to make jerky from Canada geese the process is the same as with my venison jerky actually very good. My hunting buddy has a recipe for corned goose breast this is also very good. He also has a recipe for goose breast done in a slow cooker with cranberries this makes for a excellent blind meal in a sandwich, on whole wheat bread or a good loaf of sour dough.Once the breast is cooled and thinly sliced he will utilize the left over cranberries and a few other secret items to make a chutney for a spread. Ducks are a different story when we hunt those I give the ones I shot to him.None of my small game is cooked whole. In other words it's cut up and prepped allowing me to find any shot.
Fortunately a smoothbore muzzleloader don't get to much shot in a critter or deep for that matter. Noticing the track of a pellet in meat once cooked helps whilst eating and using a fork well during eating helps to find any missed ones. Just eat gently, don't rush.
Alternatively you could do what a friend does with his waterfowl.
He roasts a goose for nine hours in a tin with two spotlessly clean house bricks in the tin. After nine hours and regular basting he chucks the goose and eats the house bricks!
Pick up a cheap hand held metal detector, they do well in finding small lead!Been a long time since hunting for table fare with a scatter gun. Reason ... still remember the painful experience of chomping on shot it the duck breast mom cooked up after hunting with dad. I stopped enjoying the shotgun gathered game rite then. Cracked tooth n all.
So after letting the game hang for a spell to get past the rigor ... how do you all deal with the shot that is left in the tasty meat of shotguned game ? Is there a tact for removing it all ... EVERY PIECE from Grouse, Rabbit and quail?
I long to go after Squirrel n such with my smoothy ... but ... have resisted since I want dearly to eat the resultant table fare.
Any advice on removing lead shot from my shotgun gathered game?
I used to skin both duck and pheasants, lay a couple of strips of bacon across them before putting them in the oven, keeps them moist!I breast out all my pheasants. I haven't plucked one in years. The breast meat is the best part of a ditch chicken anyway. The legs to me taste like liver, and I despise liver so they go in the garbage can. Rarely get lead in the breast meat but once in a while one or two still get my me.
Finding steel shot is even more of a thrill, switching to muzzle loaders thankfully saves most of us from that.Been a long time since hunting for table fare with a scatter gun. Reason ... still remember the painful experience of chomping on shot it the duck breast mom cooked up after hunting with dad. I stopped enjoying the shotgun gathered game rite then. Cracked tooth n all.
So after letting the game hang for a spell to get past the rigor ... how do you all deal with the shot that is left in the tasty meat of shotguned game ? Is there a tact for removing it all ... EVERY PIECE from Grouse, Rabbit and quail?
I long to go after Squirrel n such with my smoothy ... but ... have resisted since I want dearly to eat the resultant table fare.
Any advice on removing lead shot from my shotgun gathered game?
Interesting take. We started mostly making pheasant soup, or dishes that could be made with steamed or boiled then deboned meat, feeling that we got more meat off the bones this way.I don't like to waste good meat, so pheasant and such gets roasted whole (Dressed yes!)
Never noticed any bad flavour from shot lodged in there.
As Dad and G-father shot a good lot of driven birds, some shot in the breast was standard.
I was shown as a small boy how to get the shot out. Was in a magazine coulomb "Tap's Tips" Take a 6 penny or 8 penny nail flatten the end into a spear shape flattened, Push in every shot hole and twist while pulling it out. Shot and feathers or fur will come out. Works great!
The writer lived in Laconia NH the magazine was Sports Afield.
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