I was in the same boat this year after shooting a 12.5# western Canada – my first. Please bear with the protracted explanation:
I pulled the breast out whole with the breastplate and skin then carved off the legs/thighs [will do them in slow cooker at some point later]. I piggy-backed the 4.5# skin-on breast on the neighbors pellet grill/smoker with his T-giving turkey; I hit 154-degrees which was a bit much for my liking – will pull at 150 next time.
For the Cliffs note version - the recipe came from
HARVESTING NATURE [but I was late in making my mind up and didn’t get all the needed items so went off the rail a bit]:
Brine [recipe did not specify but I boiled then cooled this before starting; see below]
2 goose breasts 1/2 gal water [again, I plopped the entire breast and bone in the brine with attached skin]
1/2 cup Kosher salt
1/3 cup brown sugar
2 tbsp onion powder
2 tbsp garlic powder
1 tbsp mustard powder
1 tbsp whole peppercorns
Rub
"Assault and Pepper" seasoning [tacticalories.com]
Extra Virgin Olive Oil
Dipping Sauce
Melted butter
Mayonnaise
Ketchup
"Assault and Pepper" seasoning to taste
Preparation
- Combine water, salt, brown sugar, onion powder, garlic powder, muster powder, and peppercorns in a non-reactive dish [I threw this all in a pan and boiled it up for about a minute and then let it completely cool – hoping for more aromatics and infusion]
- Rinse breast meat and place in brine, allow it to sit in brine in the refrigerator overnight.
- Remove meat from brine, discard brine. Wash and pat the meat dry.
- Apply olive oil and Seasoning [see improvised rub notes below].
- Smoke at 225-235°F for approximately 4 hours until they hit an internal temperature of 150-155°F. [I hit 154-degrees and thought that was a bit much]
- Allow meat to rest, then slice thin and enjoy
Dipping Sauce
- Melt a spoonful of butter in the microwave
- Mix with 2-3 spoonful of mayonnaise
- Mix in an equal part of ketchup
- Mix in seasoning to taste, about half a spoonful.
The assault & pepper seasoning I did not have so improvised: started with Montana Steak and added Garlic powder, Onion powder, White Pepper, Mustard Powder, Red Pepper flakes, Paprika, Dark Chili Powder, Turmeric and Coriander. No real plan – threw it all together and dry taste tested it.
I am also not a great fan of ‘dipping sauces’ and the sauce described didn’t sound that great to me but made it [using the improvised dry rub] – was pleased; in moderation with each piece of goose it was good!
Overall, after everyone telling me that westerns are horrible and best fed to the dog or used in jerky or pepperoni, I really liked it. And will have it again. Key, as with all waterfowl, is not overcooking! I do think the breastbone helped keep some moisture in the breast meat. The neighbor ran the smoker much hotter for his turkey [300-325] than the goose instructions so I went solely by internal temperature and checked it every 15-30 minutes. Will try the lower temps next time for sure. Part of the fun is the experimentation!
I have also heard the Wild Goose Pastrami from Hank Shaw is really good.
This is what I started with - did not take a finishes pic....
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