Rabbit - A Less Used White Meat
Rabu, 06 Maret 2019
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Rabbit - A Less Used White
Meat
While living in Guatemala in
the 1970s I had the opportunity to meet a couple from Europe. The wife was from
southern Switzerland and the husband from northern Italy. We were invited to
dinner at their house one evening and were served a lovely, rich rabbit stew
over spaghetti noodles, with a bottle of Chianti wine. Having lived only in the
US for my first 20 years of life, I had not been exposed to rabbit as food. I
was becoming accustomed in Guatemala to eating all sorts of wonderful foods I
had never seen or heard of previously. I had no qualms about trying rabbit.
Though that was over 40 years
ago, that rabbit stew lives vividly in my memory as one of the best dishes I
have eaten. I tried to find a recipe like it, but have had no success. I tried
one time to make a rabbit stew and it was fine, but certainly not the
wonderfully rich flavors of that stew the European couple served. Unfortunately
I never got their recipe, but have dreamt of it ever since. It may be that
because of time and distance, I have built up the flavor memory in my mind, but
maybe not. I was so unsure of what to expect at the time, so I was extremely
pleased to enjoy the dish so thoroughly.
Rabbit - A Less Used White Meat |
I once ate hare in Chicago,
which was also prepared deliciously, but that rabbit stew still tops my list of
wishes to try one more time. Rabbit can be found in many groceries and
specialty markets, and these are likely domesticated. Domesticated or farmed
rabbits will be less gamey than if procured in the wild. Rabbit called for in
recipes could be substituted with chicken, turkey and possibly even pork. Hare
is gamier, a much heavier red meat requiring different recipes. They are
generally known as jackrabbits, or in the north, there are snowshoe hare.
Hunters are more likely to cook rabbit or hare than other folk in the US.
Recipes that call for hare can usually substitute another red meat for the hare.
Beef or venison, even wild boar, could be substituted in recipes calling for
hare.
I would love to be given
another opportunity to try cooking a rabbit stew. The only problem is finding a
recipe. My one time trial was not a success, though the food was good. I am
leery of trying again with another unexciting result. These days, with internet
so prevalent, there are recipes everywhere. It is more possible today to find
something that would approximate that wonderful rabbit stew recipe than even a
few years ago. It could be that rabbit was once known as a poor man's food, and
the Depression era likely made that idea stick. Rabbit has been looked down
upon as a meat source for the poor. Then the advent of super groceries where
all meat is clean and packaged has made people pretend that clean, packaged
meat was never a live animal. All meat comes from a live animal. Rabbits are
edible and delicious, with the added bonus of being a healthy meat. Variety is
important in the diet, whether meat, vegetable or grain.
I intend to continue my search
for that recipe for a southern Swiss or northern Italian rabbit stew, and hope
to find it or one like it. I urge people to become more adventurous in their
eating. We have become a society where any meat outside of beef, pork, chicken
or turkey is considered exotic and we are fearful of trying anything new. Open
your mind to new foods and flavors. There is so much diversity to be had.
Thank you for taking the time
to read my article. I hope it was informative and helped you along your own
culinary journey.
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