Yep! My butchering and cooking processes have changed a lot over the years. Now we keep all the shanks, shoulder roasts and neck roasts we can.I have a strict “never grind the shanks” rule. They are too good when slow cooked.
This looks really good, wanna share your recipe?Normally tacos are my go-to, but I usually save shanks for osso buco or a similar dish. This is your average white tail doe shank. Really I grind very little, 90% of what most people grind I either braise or make stew. Usually only get 3-4 lb of grind off a whitetail doe or smaller buck.
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Thanks. Its super simple really, I just freeze the shanks when butchering. Thaw, salt and pepper. Sear the outside and set aside. Carmelize onions and garlic, toss in veggies and broth, braise until its falling off the bone. I like to serve over polenta. I think the one pictured uses black trumpet mushrooms we found and frozen tomato slices from the garden, although trumpets are pretty mild flavored, almost any mushroom will do. I think many years ago this was the recipe I used, and we sort of wing it at this point. Sometimes we make more of a brothy braise, other times more tomatoey, etc.This looks really good, wanna share your recipe?
This is my preferred method starting last fall. Get a stainless sawzall blade and trim them to fit in the Instapot. 90 minutes. Natural release.Instapot shanks, shred the meat for taco's or Enchilladas or just toss it in a stew or soup. Takes about 45 minutes done. Keep the broth for cooking.
I had the same problem even after cutting with a fine toothed reciprocal saw and rinsing them. I now filet the shank and cut it into chunks. Hard to describe how awful it is to bite into a tiny bone.How does everyone deal with bone chips when cutting it? All looks delicious.
I have no clue why but I laughed at “burrito fodder”I'll put shank in the instant pot.
Add some beans, salsa, onions and peppers and its great burrito fodder
I do all my shanks boneless. I prefer the flavor. I have found that at times the bone marrow will give it a gamey flavor. I absolutely will not grind a shank, one of the better cuts of meat if you know what you’re doing in the kitchen.How does everyone deal with bone chips when cutting it? All looks delicious.
Think I will try boning them out this year. The problem I have is the sharp edges of the bone tend to tear through the freezer paper, boning them out would alleviate that issue.I do all my shanks boneless. I prefer the flavor. I have found that at times the bone marrow will give it a gamey flavor. I absolutely will not grind a shank, one of the better cuts of meat if you know what you’re doing in the kitchen.