Small Game Recipes

Sriracha Teriyaki Grilled Squirrel (With fried rice on the side)

Ingredients:

(squirrel)
1 squirrel 
Teriyaki sauce
Sriracha 
ginger
1 orange
sesame oil

(rice)
2 cups cooked and cooled white long grain rice
2 eggs
1 tablespoon of butter
1 1/2 cup of peas
1 carrot
baby portabella mushrooms
ginger root
half a cup green onions
2 cloves garlic
soy sauce
sesame oil
other high heat oil (coconut, grapeseed, ect.)

Method:

1. Clean squirrel. Save heart and livers if desired. Save ribs and spine for stock. Score the leg and arm meat so the brine will penetrate deeper. 
2. Mix meat in with ginger and orange zest. Add three parts teriyaki to one part Sriracha into bowl with squirrel. Add one tablespoon of sesame oil. 
3. Let sit for a few hours or overnight. 
4. On the grill, heat it on high heat. You can put the stomach meat, heart, and other loose meat on skewers. Add brined squirrel. Get nice grill marks on the meat, about four or five minutes per side.
5. Serve with rice. Recipe below. 



(rice) 
1. Mince garlic and grate ginger to taste. Dice green onions. 
2. Sitr fry eggs in butter. Set aside.
3. In a pan on medium high heat, add a tablespoon of sesame oil and a tablespoon of carrier oil. Stir fry green onions, garlic, and ginger. Set aside. 
4. Stir fry carrots and peas. 
5. Stir fry the rice, adding a little extra sesame oil. After the rice has been partially browned, add vegetables and two to three tablespoons of soy sauce (or to taste).
6. Continue to stir fry for a few more minutes. Make sure you taste the rice to see if it needs more soy sauce.




Hillbilly Pho

Ingredients:
1-1 and ½ pounds of game meat 
1 stalk of lemongrass
1 lime
1 tablespoon fish sauce 
1 onion
1-3 chili peppers or canned chili peppers
4 cloves garlic minced
2 tablespoons ginger minced
1 and ½ cup of wild mushrooms (oyster, shitake, ect.)
1 quart of game, chicken, or beef stock 
3 tablespoons of vegetable oil 
1 pound bok choy
Pho noodles (flat rice noodles)
sea salt or Himalayan salt
fresh cilantro for garnish  

Concept: This recipe is based off Hank Shaw’s Hmong squirrel stew, which he learned from Hmong hunters who’d immigrated from Vietnam after the Vietnam War. His original recipe is a lighter than mine and doesn’t include the wild mushrooms. It also doesn't use noodles. For this batch, I used squirrel and beaver meat. You could recreate this recipe, however, with a number of different wild meats. I imagine wild hogs would be particularly good.

Now, to be honest, this isn’t pho. Rather, it’s a simplified, back woods interpretation of the comfort food I’ve come to love. Squirrel and beaver are usually cooked into some sort of either fried, southern meal with gravy, and I wanted to diverge from that set of flavors to see what I could really do with the unpopular proteins I had in the freezer. So here, the flavors are punchy, spicy, and they have good citrusy notes. In hindsight, the beaver is pretty gamey for this, but the squirrel is perfect. 
The contraption I rigged up the cook since the stove broke

My stovetop also happened to break while doing this recipe, so I had to finish it out of doors. Truly the spirit of the woodsman! 

Instructions:
1. Soak meat in salt water for 12-24 hours
2. Mince only the white, tender portions of the lemongrass. Slice mushrooms. Mince garlic, ginger, and chili peppers. Set aside all these. 
3. Leave meat on the bone or cut into manageable sizes. Heat oil in large pot on medium to medium high heat. Brown the meat on both sides. Set aside. 
An artistic depiction of the spices
4. Stir fry the lemongrass, mushrooms, garlic, ginger, and chili peppers for 90 seconds. 
5. Put meat back into pot. Pour the stock. The stock should cover the meat. If it doesn’t add water. Add fish sauce, squeeze the juice of half the lime, and add around half an onion sliced in whole circles. 
6. Let simmer for 1-2 hours, stirring occasionally. Chop the chard into big chunks and set aside. 
7. When the meat is falling off the bone, remove pieces, and pull the meat from the bone. Put back into the soup without the bones. Add the bok choy and cook for another ten minutes. 
8. Heat noodles separately. Use pho noodles or a similar flat, rice based noodle. 
9. Pour stock over prepared noodles and add cilantro as a garnish. Salt to taste.
The final product!

            Pro tip: squeeze some extra lime juice into the soup and add some fresh bean sprouts for another layer of delicious!  

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