We know it’s hunting season when friends show up with gifts–a heart and a liver that they just harvested from a doe in our woods. While they might normally toss them, they know that John will use them to make an amazing venison liverwurst. The new heart and liver will join what John has in the freezer and will soon appear as John’s redneck pâté.
With bow season upon us and guys outside climbing into their tree stands, we’ve been inside noting a lack of freezer space. We still have venison from last year. One reason for this is that venison lends itself to stews and chilis and other slow cooking dishes that I don’t tend to cook in the summer. However, the main reason we still have so much is because John stored it all in the man-cave freezer. I had no idea it was down there!
Quelle bonne surprise– a freezer full of white butcher paper wrapped packages of ground meat and roasts. Bring on the venison pasta sauce. Let’s eat some pulled venison sandwiches. And absolutely, positively John gets busy making venison-jalapeno sausage and Italian venison sausage. So the freezer goes from being full of raw venison to being full of sausage. Not a problem. The hunters often stop in for a beer after an evening in the woods. A jalapeno sausage is the perfect post-hunting snack to go with a cold beer. It’s also the perfect snack food for a Sunday afternoon Ravens game.
This Sunday got off to a promising start with all the kids and grandkids coming over to watch the Ravens-Eagles game. Sixteen-month-old grandson John, whose first word was “cook,” was most eager to help whip up a huge pot of venison chili. We were too wrapped up in the game ( and nibbling jalapeno sausage) to eat the chili until afterwards, at which point it served to console us in our loss.
Unlike liverwurst, which has a select group of devotees, chili is eaten by pretty much everyone. It’s a good first way to get used to venison. Substitute ground venison for ground beef and then don’t tell anyone. They’ll love the flavor and then you can tell them what it is!
Here is one way to use up a bunch of ground venison:
Chili for a crowd
- 5 lbs. ground venison
- 2 onions, chopped
- 2 large cans of dark red kidney beans
- 2 large cans of diced tomatoes
- 1 can of tomato sauce
- 1 small can of tomato paste
- a fistful (or two) of dried oregano, crumbled
- chili powder to taste (for me, that would be several tablespoonfuls or maybe half the jar)
- cumin to taste (a little less than the chili powder)
- salt and pepper
Before the game starts, brown the onion and the meat in a large stockpot. Puree one can of the kidney beans (drained first) in a food processor and add the ground paste to the pot. Add the second can of kidney beans whole (but drained). Stir in the remaining ingredients and let simmer until half-time. Serve with garnishes of grated cheese and sour cream or Greek yogurt. Eat as a dip with tortilla scoops or as a dinner with corn bread.
I personally like to add green pepper with the onion, but a certain son-in-law doesn’t eat green pepper. (Plus I didn’t have one.) The batch of chili I made for the pathetic Ravens-Eagles game did not use my usual spices either. I was out of chili powder so I used Black Dust Coffee & Spice Rub that I bought at Savory Spice Shop in Boulder, Colorado last June. The interesting combination of ingredients (coffee, black pepper, cumin, Alderwood smoked salt, brown sugar, cocoa, mustard, coriander and chipotle) made for a mellow chili. Wanting more zip, I added some red pepper and dried jalapeno flakes. (Don’t tell John I used his dried jalapeno!) It still wasn’t very zippy, though, and every time Kristin came upstairs the aroma tricked her into thinking that I was baking brownies. I should have used the rest of the jar of dried jalapeno, but I might have gotten in trouble with the resident sausage maker.
For a zippier chili, I could have used Savory Spice’s Red Cloud Peak Seasoning. I used it Saturday night to coat a round roast. Mmmmm. It has hot chili powder in it, but no cumin. But I do have cumin, so I could have added that to the chili myself.
What did I learn from today’s chili? If you want the home team to win, don’t eat mellow chili and don’t flavor your chili with seasonings from the Denver area (as good as they may be). From now on, for Raven’s games at least, I’ll stick with hot chili powder from the home team–McCormick.