-=> Quoting Michael Loo to Jim Weller <=-
ML> I've made the occasional cherry sauce, mostly for duck.
That's a wonderful combination.
> Speaking of game, Ray used his fourth tag last week. He already
> had one mule deer, one whitetail deer and a moose and now he has
> bagged an elk
ML> Are the tags cross-specific, with a
ML> mix and match, or is it one of a kind
ML> per customer?
You have to get a general hunting licence and then purchase a tag for
each species of big game and hope you come across the right one. He
bought and used four. He skipped bear as he's not fussy about the
taste and skipped both mountain sheep and antelope as they don't
live in his part of the province.
ML. If one had a gigantic family, would 4 meese be a possibility?
Absolutely. You need four people over the age of 18 who have all
taken a gun safety course and have a clean criminal record so as to
obtain a PAL (Possession and Firearms Acquisition License), then a
hunting licence and finally buy a moose tag.
It was simpler when I was young. I only had to be 16. I took a
hunter safety course in high school that covered not only gun
safety but some first aid, map reading, using a compass and an
overview of game seasons and limits, with a brief mention about
trespassing and what you couldn't do inside preserves and parks.
Then I was eligible for a general gun carrying and hunting licence
that allowed for small game, upland birds, waterfowl and one deer
per year. There was no criminal background check required back then
unless you wanted a permit for a hand gun, which I didn't.
JW> Title: Elk Tenderloin with Brandy Mustard Sauce
JW> Recipe By: El Charro Cafe, Tucson, Arizona
ML> Funny, I didn't think of Arizona as elk territory, mule deer
ML> maybe. Of course, I didn't see that as an El Charro kind of
ML> dish, either.
Elk live in the Rocky Mountains from Alberta and B.C. all the way
down to northern Arizona and New Mexico.
They claim to make it in their cookbook.
ML> Pour salt over one side of the steak until
ML> it is completely covered. Place steak, salt
ML> side down, on the hot embers. Cook 25 min.
ML> Fireplace sirloin
ML> 2 in thick sirloin steak - usually 3 to 4 lb
ML> Pour salt over one side of the steak until it is completely
ML> covered. Place steak, salt side down, on the hot embers. Cook
ML> 25 min .. ML> Salt the uncooked side of the steak and place,
ML> salt side down, on the embers. Cook about 20 min if you like it
ML> rare ... Remove steak from embers, brush off remaining salt
An interesting treatment suitable for campers outdoors. All they
need is a flat rock. Some people claim to cook meat directly on hot
coals but I haven't tried that and can't recommend it.
MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: Roughin' It Steak
Categories: Australian, Camping, Grill, Steak
Yield: 1 Serving
Good piece of steak, 1 1/2"
Thick
Spoonful of Worcestershire
Sauce
Couple of pinches of pepper
Couple of pinches of salt
Spoonful of margarine
Mix salt, pepper, Worcestershire sauce and margarine together and coat
steak.
Wake a few good shovelfuls of coals and form a flat bed several inches
thick. Place steaks on coals and grill until juice flows from meat.
Lift steak, freshen coals, and cook other side.
Serve when done the way you like it.
From: Kevin Jcjd Symons
MMMMM
Frankly I don't see Kevin as a bush cook.
Cheers
Jim
... Why is there no mouse flavoured cat food?
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