bburtner@moran
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Any loungers out there enjoy "wild" turkey" insted of the store bought birds?
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Schott 568 Vandals Jacket - $1,250 The classic Perfecto motorcycle jacket, in a very special limited-edition Schott double rider style. vintage_jayhawk said:A couple years ago my brother managed to shoot a turkey for Thanksgiving dinner. The only problem was my mom couldn't find all the buckshot before she cooked it, so we had to chew carefully!It was better than any store bought turkey I've ever had, plus it was about twice the size!
As long as they haven't been skinned you can roast them just the same. The ****** meat on a wild turkey is quite a bit darker and not as full and round as the domestic raised birds' are. The taste is different, not necessarily stronger, but fuller. You can hardly call it gamy though. When hunting turkey you're not looking to center the bird in the shot pattern, so there usually isn't a whole lot of damage the entire bird, just the neck up. If it does wind up getting peppered by the shot and needs to be skinned, I wrap the ****** in sliced salt pork or bacon and roast it, then make a cream gravy. With the skinned wings, legs, thighs, and back I make a fricassee.dhermann1 said:My nephew bagged one several years ago. My brother told me you can't cook them the same as a domesticated bird, all together in a roasting pan. Is this true? Anyone have any pics or recipes for a roast wild turkey? I would assume they have much more flavor.