Five Ways to Prepare Wild Game in Warm Weather

by
posted on June 26, 2012
2012626103749-duck_salad_home.jpg

In the summer months I turn the oven on very infrequently. Most of my cooking happens in the outdoors over an open flame and many of my dishes are served room temperature or even cold. I like to save the warm hearty venison stews for the winter months. Food, after all, should fit with the seasons, in both taste and how it makes you feel.

These are some of my favorite ways to prepare wild game for the warm weather months.

Venison Carpaccio
A venison tenderloin is wonderful after it has been aged, chilled and thinly sliced, raw. Axis venison is always my top choice because of its inherent sweetness. Top it with a quickly sautéed medley of your favorite diced vegetables, like mushrooms, onions and peppers, and finish it off with a dash of vinegar, olive oil, salt and pepper. In a short time you’ll have an elegant dish for summer parties. Serve it with toast points and it makes the perfect appetizer.

Liver Pate
This is a wonderfully rich spread that gets better as it chills in the refrigerator. Give your favorite type of liver a quick sear on the grill or stovetop along with some onions or shallots and a bit of red wine. Once soft, puree it all in a blender with cold butter, a dash of cream and balsamic vinegar. Adjust the seasonings to make it your own and serve chilled with a loaf of crusty bread.

Duck Breast Salad
I prefer duck breast cold, which makes it a wonderful summer dish. All it needs is a quick sear on a grill or stovetop and then it can, and should, be served rare. Slice it thin and serve it on a platter with orange sections, alternating one after the other. Garnish with a medley of your favorite herbs—mint, tarragon and parsley—for example. Drizzle with a good olive oil and some coarse sea salt and you have a wonderful combination of flavors to savor on a hot afternoon.

Chopped Smoked Turkey or Pheasant Salad
A New York-style chopped salad is one of my favorite meals because you can throw in the whole “kitchen sink” of goodies. A turkey or pheasant breast that has been brined and then slowly smoked and diced adds a wonderful flavor. Then add chopped romaine, diced tomatoes, cucumbers and every other salad fixing you love and you have a salad that is a hearty summer meal. You could also create a salad bar of ingredients and let everyone make their own custom version.

Chilled Game Gazpacho
This soup is refreshing and doesn’t require any cooking to make the base, only a blender. Combine tomatoes, cucumber, green onion, cilantro, lime juice, tomato juice and salt and pepper to taste, then add any wild-game leftovers, grilled shrimp or fish as a garnish on the top. The soup is versatile and will taste better as it sits in the refrigerator while the flavors develop. It is also versatile—if you have vegetarian guests, you can swap out the wild game for avocado and tortilla strips.

Latest

Easton 5 LEDE
Easton 5 LEDE

New for 2025: Easton 5.0 Arrows

The 5.0 is a projectile-winner, a new speedy lightweight from Easton that offers multiple setup options.

New for 2025: The 5th-Generation Burris Fullfield Riflescope

To commemorate its 50th anniversary, Burris Optics has unveiled the completely redesigned fifth-generation Fullfield riflescope.

New for 2025: Delta McKenzie X-Ray Series

See actual internal vitals from 360 degrees, including an elevated treestand view with Delta McKenzie's X-Ray Series.

New for 2025: Traditions NitroBolt Muzzleloader

Traditions introduces NitroBolt, first-ever bolt-action muzzleloader designed to use patented Federal Firestick.

Henry Introduces Its Special Products Division (SPD)

Henry Repeating Arms explodes into 2025 with the unveiling of the company’s Special Products Division (SPD) with a mission to create an all-new series of customized, purpose-built firearms. And the SPD’s first launch proves that Henry isn’t your grand pappy’s lever-action anymore.

New for 2025: Hevi-Shot Hevi-18 28-gauge Shotshells

Hevi Shot's Hevi-18 is now loaded in 28-gauge in a 3-inch shell, holding 1 ¼ ounces of No. 9 TSS shot, at a muzzle velocity of 1,200 fps.

Interests



Get the best of American Hunter delivered to your inbox.