Had a great hunt couple weeks ago with my buddy in Kansas.
Have a PILE of meat to play around with so I will be making a LOT of stuff with it! One recipe I have been wanting to try is Canada goose thigh tasso. I'm sure I'm not the only cajun to have ever thought of trying it; cajuns make tasso out of damn near everything- even garfish! So, since we shot some huge honkers, I pulled the legs and thighs out of a dozen birds. When I got home, I deboned the thighs so I had two pieces of meat, one on either side of the thigh bone...ended up with exactly 3# of meat.
Then I mixed up 0.25% cure #1 and 1.4% salt, coated the meat and in the fridge it went. I pulled the thighs out this morning. They have been curing for 9 days which is more than enough time. Fired up the smokehouse with some hickory and red oak and after seasoning, hung them in the smokehouse. I will smoke the goose meat @120* for 4 hours to get smoke on them, then crank the heat up to around 200*F for about an hour until I get the color I want on them.
Have a PILE of meat to play around with so I will be making a LOT of stuff with it! One recipe I have been wanting to try is Canada goose thigh tasso. I'm sure I'm not the only cajun to have ever thought of trying it; cajuns make tasso out of damn near everything- even garfish! So, since we shot some huge honkers, I pulled the legs and thighs out of a dozen birds. When I got home, I deboned the thighs so I had two pieces of meat, one on either side of the thigh bone...ended up with exactly 3# of meat.
Then I mixed up 0.25% cure #1 and 1.4% salt, coated the meat and in the fridge it went. I pulled the thighs out this morning. They have been curing for 9 days which is more than enough time. Fired up the smokehouse with some hickory and red oak and after seasoning, hung them in the smokehouse. I will smoke the goose meat @120* for 4 hours to get smoke on them, then crank the heat up to around 200*F for about an hour until I get the color I want on them.
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