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Venison Taste
Texotic Tables Meats Ranked as Table Fare
Compiled for the Exotic Wildlife Association members by Elizabeth
Cary Mungall,
EWA Wildlife Research Consultant (See
Chart)
With interest growing in the possibilities of exotics as
non-traditional livestock, meat value of the various species has
come under study. Preliminary investigations have pointed to low
cholesterol, low fat and low calorie count for a selection of
exotics like axis, blackbuck, sika and nilgai that are present on
Texas rangeland in harvestable numbers. For lasting success as a
marketable commodity, exotics' meat also has to taste good. To get
an idea about acceptability on the table, the Exotic Wildlife
Association put out a survey among members and their friends. Each
of the 35 people responding rated the exotics' meats that he or she
had eaten. For comparison, 3 native species commonly hunted in Texas
were also listed on the form.
Survey results demonstrate the general consensus that axis is tops.
Axis had the most responses, and the only vote less than "excellent"
was a single "good." Of the common exotics, blackbuck came next. The
gap between it and axis points up the extreme leanness of many
exotics' meats, a characteristic that can lead to complaints about
dryness unless compensated for by adding fat or by using moist heat
when cooking. Eland, one of the few wild species that has marbling
similar to beef, comes next. It is lean relative to the nilgai, the
only numerous exotic large enough to offer a big carcass. Coming
soon after, on its heels, are sika and fallow, always a close pair.
Sika is lauded among the comments for a "rich, gamey taste Europeans
like." Fallow is the northern staple for deer farming where tasty
tropical species like axis cannot manage.
Comments with hogs, sheep, aoudad and ibex emphasize that young
animals may rate good to excellent while adults only score fair to
good. With all ages averaged together, European wild boar still
leads hogs of mixed characteristics by 3.5 to 4.5 on the 1 to 10
scale (1 = best). Both mouflon and its Corsican crosses rank 4.2,
partly a reflection of the Texas bias against domestic lamb in some
circles.
The white-tailed deer, Texas's primary native game, is the only
animal getting the whole range of responses from "the best I've
eaten" to "the worst I've eaten" - sometimes both extremes from the
same people. Here handling as well as sex, age, diet and season are
mentioned. Doubtless these considerations affect other eating
experiences also. And even with inherently coarse or tough meats
like waterbuck or barasingha, careful preparation in the kitchen can
often give pleasing results. This helps many meats that got low
votes and low averages to win high votes also. So don't shy away
from exotics meats. Happy eating!
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