I am planning to brine them in a brown sugar, soy sauce, kosher salt and apple juice mixture overnight. I'm just experimenting here...hope it works out. I was thinking of coating them with olive oil to keep them moist during the smoking process. I have a few ideas to try, but I admit this is truly an experiment. I've looked at a few websites and they have given me a few ideas to try. I've never eaten snow goose before. My friend gave them to me because they are leftover from last year and he is getting ready to go make another trip at the end of this month. Here are a few ideas that I am thinking about trying.
I'm going to try coating the breast meat in olive oil using a celery salt and lemon pepper mixture as a dry rub on a few of these.
Im going to try a mixture of natural honey and pure maple syrup to use as a glaze on a few of these.
I'm going to try a mixture of olive oil and dry Italian seasoning using it as a glaze on some of these breasts.
Another idea i had was to inject some maraschino cherry juice into a few of the breasts and to coat the outsides with the cherry juice as well before i smoke them.
I'm going to try to smoke these low and slow. These breasts are very lean meat with very little fat at all so I am afraid to overcook them because it will dry them out! I will spray these generously with sweetened apple juice during smoking to keep them moist. I'm going to use applewood to smoke them. I think the brine will keep them pretty moist
Do you think i should foil these and let them sit in apple juice after I cook them for awhile??? No... I wouldn't do that... just lightly tent with foil and let rest 15=20 minutes when you take them off the smoker
Im not going to guarantee the results...wish me luck! I need it! No smoke is ever guaranteed so good luck with your ventures