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View Full Version : The other dark meat: Raccoon is making it to the table


hunybee
01-13-2009, 10:52 AM
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/251/story/59566.html


He rolls into the parking lot of Leon's Thriftway in an old, maroon Impala with a trunk full of frozen meat. Raccoon — the other dark meat.
In five minutes, Montrose, Mo., trapper Larry Brownsberger is sold out in the lot at 39th Street and Kensington Avenue. Word has gotten around about how clean his frozen raccoon carcasses are. How nicely they’re tucked up in their brown butcher paper. How they almost look like a trussed turkey … or something.
His loyal customers beam as they leave, thinking about the meal they'll soon be eating.
That is, as soon as the meat is thawed. Then brined. Soaked overnight. Parboiled for two hours. Slow-roasted or smoked or barbecued to perfection.
Raccoon, which made the first edition of The Joy of Cooking in 1931, is labor-intensive but well worth the time, aficionados say.
"Good things come to those who wait," says A. Reed, 86, who has been eating raccoon since she was a girl.
"This right here," she says, holding up a couple of brown packages tied with burlap string, “this is a great value. And really good eatin’. Best-kept secret around.”
Raccoons go for $3 to $7 — each, not per pound — and will feed about five adults. Four, if they’re really hungry.
Those who dine on raccoon meat sound the same refrain: It's good eatin'.
As long as you can get past the "ick" factor that it's a varmint, more often seen flattened on asphalt than featured on a restaurant menu. (One exception: French restaurant Le Fou Frog served raccoon about a dozen years ago, a waiter said.)
Eating varmints is even in vogue these days, at least in Britain. The New York Times reported last week that Brits are eating squirrels with wild abandon.
Here in Kansas City, you won't see many, if any, squirrel ads in the papers. But that's where Brownsberger was advertising his raccoons last week.
The meat isn’t USDA-inspected, and few state regulations apply, same as with deer and other game. No laws prevent trappers from selling raccoon carcasses.
As for diseases, raccoon rabies doesn't exist in Missouri, state conservation scientists say. It's an East Coast phenomenon. Parvo and distemper kill raccoons quickly but aren’t transferred to humans. Also, trappers are unlikely to sell meat from an animal that appears to be diseased.
"Raccoon meat is some of the healthiest meat you can eat," says Jeff Beringer, a furbearer resource biologist with the Missouri Department of Conservation.
"During grad school, my roommate and I ate 32 coons one winter. It was all free, and it was really good. If you think about being green and eating organically, raccoon meat is the ultimate organic food," with no steroids, no antibiotics, no growth hormones.
And when people eat wild meat, Beringer says, "it reminds the modernized society — people who usually eat food from a plastic wrapper — where food comes from.”
Statewide, consumption of raccoon meat can be tracked somewhat by how many raccoon pelts are harvested each year. In 2007, 118,166 pelts were sold.
But there are plenty more out there, Beringer says. The raccoon population "doubled in the '80s. There's more now than when Missouri was first settled."
He estimates there are about 20 raccoons per square mile of habitat.
In the wild, raccoons typically live five or six years. Populations that grow too dense can be decimated by disease, especially when temperatures drop, Beringer says.
"The animals huddle together, passing on the infections. In the winter, we sometimes have massive die-offs. If we can control the fluctuations in the populations by hunting and trapping, we can have healthier animals."
Fur trappers, who harvest most of the raccoons sold in Missouri, "try to kill as humanely as possible," says Beringer, a trapper himself. "It's part of the culture."
Pelts last year sold on average for about $17. They're used for coats and hats, and many are sold to Russia. But the conflict between Russia and Georgia severely cut into the fur-trading market, Beringer says. "Pelts will probably be less this year."
For the average person, who probably doesn't spend much time thinking how a steer or a pig or a chicken might meet its maker, raccoons may seem too cute to eat.
Until you try one.
At the Blue Springs home of Billy Washington, raccoon, fish, bison and deer are staples on his family’s table.
On this day, it's raccoon.
All night he has been soaking a carcass in a solution of salt and vinegar in a five-gallon bucket. Now he rinses the raccoon in his kitchen sink.
"Eating raccoon has never gone out of style. It's just hard to get unless you know somebody," he says as he carefully trims away the fat and the scent glands.
"My kids love eating game. They think eating deer and buffalo make you run faster and jump higher. My grandkids will just tear this one up, it'll be so good."
The meat is almost ready to be boiled, except for one thing: Although its head, innards and three paws have been removed, it still has one. That’s the law.
"They leave the paw on to prove it's not a cat or a dog," Washington says.
He cuts off the paw and drops the carcass into a stew pot, slices up a carrot, celery and onion, and sprinkles some seasoning into the water. Two and a half hours later, he transfers it to a Dutch oven. It looks a lot like chicken.
He bathes the raccoon with his own combination of barbecue sauces. Stuffs the cavity with canned sweet potatoes and pours the rest of the juice from the can over the breast.
"I follow the same tradition I watched when I was little. My uncle would cook 'em all day, saving the littlest coon for me," he says.
"If stores could sell coon, we’d run out of them. It's a long-hidden secret that they're so good."
After several hours, a delicious smell — roast beef? chicken? — drifts from the oven.
A mingling of garlic and onion and sweet-smelling spices.
And when Washington opens the lid, a tiny leg falls easily from the bone.
“See that? Tender as a mother’s love,” he says with a grin. “Good eatin’.”
And the taste?
Definitely not chicken.

babysteps
01-13-2009, 10:56 AM
EEWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW EW EW EW EW EW EW EW EW EW.

I'm sorry, but I'd have to be PRETTY DANGED HUNGRY to even consider eating racoon.

hunybee
01-13-2009, 10:59 AM
nah... not my first choice, but i'd eat it.



now skunk on the other hand....hmmmmm


'course that may have more to do with the prep work on that one

AnnieOakley
01-13-2009, 11:02 AM
We have friends who live in Louisiana and they tell us....'if we kill it, we eat it' so you don't know what's in the gumbo.

AnnieOakley
01-13-2009, 11:04 AM
nah... not my first choice, but i'd eat it.



now skunk on the other hand....hmmmmm


'course that may have more to do with the prep work on that one

I saw both skunk and raccoon this morning on the way to work. I think I might have nailed the skunk because I smelled skunk when I came through same area but now it was light out.

babysteps
01-13-2009, 11:19 AM
Yeah, Ok, so I'm a wimp. :lol:

My initial reaction remains the same.

Ewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww!

Sly
01-13-2009, 11:34 AM
:razz: Haaaaa! City folk! Is possum pie out also? LOL I know it's spelled with an "O"........

hunybee
01-13-2009, 11:40 AM
i ain't city folk :mrgreen:


i don't get much chance to see possum up here, but i'd try it. whadya do with it? crock pot?

ovendoctor
01-13-2009, 12:04 PM
use to go to church potlucks
use to tell the gals that dinner was picked up along the way[LOL]

packyderms_wife
01-13-2009, 12:08 PM
Tastes a lot like pork and you need to treat it like pork and or bear meat.

The old Joy of Cooking cookbook has instructions on how to clean them and cook them, along with possum, ground hog, etc. This would be the ones published in the early 70's or earlier. If you have one from the 30's it has even more recipes than the one from the 70's. The JoC from the 80's is worthless for old time cooking.

Kimberly

GrayGal
01-13-2009, 12:20 PM
We eat road kill if it is still wiggling. Saves a lot of bother hunting it down as well as cartridges. The carcass isn't as good, though, if it has been hit by a car. There is a lot of hematoma (sp? "blood in the meat") and the over all bleed out isn't as good. Even carcasses from hunters aren't usually bled out as well as I'd like, but again, when the meat is free and in front of us, we usually try to take a stab at salvage. Seems better than just leaving it to go to waste.

We don't have racoons here, but we'd eat them if we did. We get a lot of wild & feral pigs and trapping those is a community service as well as tasty.

Pigeons are supposed to be tasty, too. Do folks eat those yet?

As prices go up and folks lose their incomes from job loss, I suspect their "eeuw" factor will go way down. Pretty soon one of the major questions will be "can I eat it?"

curlysue
01-13-2009, 12:52 PM
I would never knowingly eat varments. However, a few years back while on the campaign trail for a freind, we had to attend some gatherings in the "hills." After attending a couple of small ones, I was invited to the wing ding. Since I was the one invited, I was required to go. If "we were going to make head way with these particuliar groups (families vote), since nobody else(other canidates) had been invited, backing out was not an option.

Upon arriving at dusk, I was greeted with bluegrass music playing, a big bon fire, and a wonderful aroma of food. I commented on the wonderful smell of the food. I was then led to the "fixens." As I entered the line, I was handed a cup with some clear liquid and a plate to put my food on. I grab a biscuit (I recognized what it was), and placed a scoop from each of the 4 kettles on my plate.

I went and sat by the fire, took a sip of my drink and knew I was in for an interesting night. The drink was smooth going down, but then wham, yup it was shine. Since I had not eaten since breakfast, I decided no matter what I needed to eat the fixens or I was going to be in trouble. So I ate it. It was good, until I asked what kind of meat it was.

So I am of the opinion, if I do not know what the meat is, it smell wonderful, and a mason jar of shine, I would probably eat it if it were prepared by someone else.

BoldBeliever
01-13-2009, 01:43 PM
1. Abstain from any meat with blood still in it. (Acts 15)
2. Some animal diseases may not be killed by cooking, so you could still be in big trouble.

Sugaree
01-14-2009, 08:26 AM
I would try it! Heck I would try just about anything. I would think that if you catch it yourself it just tastes better- fruits of your labors and all that. Plus if you're a decent cook you know how to make almost anything taste good!

No eeew factor for me, I was raised on Polish food. If I can handle duck's blood soup I can probably handle anything!

packyderms_wife
01-14-2009, 12:49 PM
I would try it! Heck I would try just about anything. I would think that if you catch it yourself it just tastes better- fruits of your labors and all that. Plus if you're a decent cook you know how to make almost anything taste good!

No eeew factor for me, I was raised on Polish food. If I can handle duck's blood soup I can probably handle anything!

You haven't lived until you've eaten fresh raw seal! Had that experience when I was four years old at my maternal grandmothers.

My mom loved fresh groundhog and fresh turtle.

Kimberly

michigreg
01-14-2009, 02:40 PM
...So a couple years back, at my old job, a particularly *** fellow employee brought in a racoon he trapped;, still in the trap, hissing at everybody.
The next day, the desk it was on was appropriatly scoured.
A few days later, in comes the slow cooker with what else in it...RACOON!!!
One of our other employees (Who, as it turned out got FIRED over this incident) sat there on company time WAY past the time he was supposed to be out making deliveries, chowing down on this....

Okay, let it be known I will not knowingly eat anything considered unclean by Scripture....But it did'nt even smell right to me, even berfore I knew what it was.
"Smell Test?"
Just my .02 on it.....:shock:

Caplock50
01-14-2009, 06:11 PM
Shame on you for starting this thread...













...without first passing me a plateful! Ummmm, I'm dying of hunger now. And all I got for supper tonight is ramen noodles with P&Bs mixed in. Any armadillo ready? How about the gopher? I know the 'pond squackin' soup should be ready by now; been cookin' all day. And them snake steaks sure smell good! Yeee-Haw!! Party time! Chow down and pass the jug! Crank up the fiddle and lets cut the rug!


No, I just got too lazy to get up and actually do some cooking, is all.

hunybee
01-14-2009, 06:27 PM
:lol:

Sugaree
01-15-2009, 03:20 PM
You haven't lived until you've eaten fresh raw seal! Had that experience when I was four years old at my maternal grandmothers.

My mom loved fresh groundhog and fresh turtle.

Kimberly

I would try seal! Hey the Eskimos seem to like it so why not :mrgreen: How would you describe it?

I have never had turtle but I've heard it's good.

Had snake & gator both, they taste very similar. YUM!