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Do you mean 12 hours as in half a day? Most game meats should be fall apart tender at that point. I do 12 hours minimum in the crock pot on low, but usually throw it in the night before and let it cook all night. The next day I'll test it after 12 hours. If it's fall apart tender I'll reduce the heat to "warm" until dinner. If it needs more time, I'll keep it going until it is tender. Last week I did sheep shanks in the crock pot for probably 16 hours and they came out great.I've always thought them to be more tender than just about anything that was low/slow cooked for half a day
Do you mean 12 hours as in half a day? Most game meats should be fall apart tender at that point. I do 12 hours minimum in the crock pot on low, but usually throw it in the night before and let it cook all night. The next day I'll test it after 12 hours. If it's fall apart tender I'll reduce the heat to "warm" until dinner. If it needs more time, I'll keep it going until it is tender. Last week I did sheep shanks in the crock pot for probably 16 hours and they came out great.
That moose flatiron looks great.
That is what I do for shank sections for Osso Bucco....Do you mean 12 hours as in half a day? Most game meats should be fall apart tender at that point. I do 12 hours minimum in the crock pot on low, but usually throw it in the night before and let it cook all night. The next day I'll test it after 12 hours. If it's fall apart tender I'll reduce the heat to "warm" until dinner. If it needs more time, I'll keep it going until it is tender. Last week I did sheep shanks in the crock pot for probably 16 hours and they came out great.
That moose flatiron looks great.
We lived in Italy for three years and had Osso Bucco a few times there.......I'm drooling over that picture, and I just finished lunch.That is what I do for shank sections for Osso Bucco....
I'm a big prime rib fan and like it rare, but my wife likes the ends and my daughters fall in between those two so it works out very well for the distribution of meat. Here's my plate of elk backstrap, we all get that rare. But those caramelized end pieces are also hard to pass up.if someone wants a more well-done piece, they get the end piece.
I keep my propane tank indoors in the winter to help it perform when i take it out and turn on grill! helps alotWell Gents- a huge success last night Rubbed the steaks with olive oilI, coarse slat and pepper. It was cold out and the grill didn't get as hot as I hoped, but grilled the steaks a little longer on the first side to get them slightly browned, flipped them and then as soon as it hit 130 pulled them and let them rest 5 minutes. I'd say right in between rare and medium rare.
Not as tender as tenderloin (wasn't expecting that anyways), but tender enough and really good flavor. No more grinding those cuts
Yes! I like to take the tenderizer hammer to them until very thin. Then layer on some interesting stuff, maybe something green, maybe some stinky cheese, then I roll it up tight and tie with butcher string.I fillet flatiron steaks from the scapulas of caribou and moose.
I usually grill them rolled up so they are med rare on the inside.
You can also get fancy and stuff them with cream cheese filling, roll, wrap with bacon.
Hank Shaw has a good website on fileting the flatirons from the scapula:
https://honest-food.net/cut-flat-iron-steak/
https://honest-food.net/grilled-flat-iron-steak-recipe/