- Banned
- #81
No doubt, no swine in my house.Pigs are the nastiest animal on earth. Why take their nasty fat & add it to anything ???? !!!! ????? 1/2 the Texas ranchers don't even eat the nuisance hogs, they leave them for the buzzards.
No doubt, no swine in my house.Pigs are the nastiest animal on earth. Why take their nasty fat & add it to anything ???? !!!! ????? 1/2 the Texas ranchers don't even eat the nuisance hogs, they leave them for the buzzards.
I'm not seeing the contradiction you seem to be. If you are adding all those things to your burger (i generally put a bit of mayo on the bottom bun to catch the juice and call it good) all the more reason to keep the wild game flavor to the maximum.It's funny to read comments about how they'll never cut their elk burgers with any fat because they love elk and don't want to mask the flavor. Except they'll then add buns, vegetables, cheese, sauces, etc (which all can be said to mask the flavor).
Most people add fat to wild game burgers not to alter the flavor, but to help keep the burger intact and keep it from drying out during the cooking process.
And the other 1/2 of we "Texas Ranchers" enjoy hunting AND eating our feral hogs because they taste WAY better than market pork. It's true we sometimes have to do an eradication hunt when they get so thick they compete with our livestock for resources-- but I'll take a hog (any time of the year, BTW) to the freezer and feed my family a meat I'd put right up there with venison and elk (which I can only hunt a few months out of the year). That said, there is no doubt the buzzards in Texas eat WELLPigs are the nastiest animal on earth. Why take their nasty fat & add it to anything ???? !!!! ????? 1/2 the Texas ranchers don't even eat the nuisance hogs, they leave them for the buzzards.
I was just saying it's funny. People seem to get all righteous about wild game meat when it comes to adding fat but don't seem to care how many other ingredients you add (such as seasoning, vegetables, sauces, etc).I'm not seeing the contradiction you seem to be. If you are adding all those things to your burger (i generally put a bit of mayo on the bottom bun to catch the juice and call it good) all the more reason to keep the wild game flavor to the maximum.
If you know how to form a burger properly and don't overcook it you also dont need to worry about the burger falling apart or being dry. I promise you this is true.
Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk
I see his point. I don’t see a ton of them in this thread, save for various cheeses, but I don’t know how many posts I’ve read about adding A1 or BBQ sauce. I don’t think there’s anything that masks flavors more than those two sauces (and really, A1 is basically bbq sauce anyway).I'm not seeing the contradiction you seem to be. If you are adding all those things to your burger (i generally put a bit of mayo on the bottom bun to catch the juice and call it good) all the more reason to keep the wild game flavor to the maximum.
If you know how to form a burger properly and don't overcook it you also dont need to worry about the burger falling apart or being dry. I promise you this is true.
Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk
Bacon. Add ~10% bacon and thank me later.
What kind fat or meat/fat do you use for ground Elk, Pork, Beef or other or nothing. And what % do you use. I have heard some guys will get 70/30 ground beef and and it to the Elk in different percentages. I know if you plan on using some of the ground for burgers you will most likely need a higher fat percentage just so it doesn't fall apart. Some say just and egg and bread crumbs. What's your take?
Have not tried that, but everything is better with bacon. Until that suggestion, I was with 5% beef fat.Bacon. Add ~10% bacon and thank me later.
I use beef Fat. 10% for burger and 20% for pepperoni or summer sausageWhat kind fat or meat/fat do you use for ground Elk, Pork, Beef or other or nothing. And what % do you use. I have heard some guys will get 70/30 ground beef and and it to the Elk in different percentages. I know if you plan on using some of the ground for burgers you will most likely need a higher fat percentage just so it doesn't fall apart. Some say just and egg and bread crumbs. What's your take?
This thread is about burgers...not dry aged steaks. A couple of times a year I will buy a really good porterhouse for me and the wife to split but there is nothing on a wild game animal that is even remotely comparable to that.I see his point. I don’t see a ton of them in this thread, save for various cheeses, but I don’t know how many posts I’ve read about adding A1 or BBQ sauce. I don’t think there’s anything that masks flavors more than those two sauces (and really, A1 is basically bbq sauce anyway).
I do find it curious that so many folks think of game as superior to beef or pork. I’d challenge anyone to say that a 90 day dry aged chunk of prime grade (or wagyu, since it’s already been brought up in this thread) grass fed beef is somehow inferior to elk. Different, yes. Superior is a different story. The same goes for a pastured pork or wild boar Ragu; They satisfy a different itch, and they all have a place on my dinner table.
More bacon and pork belly for meNo doubt, no swine in my house.