HOME & LIVING TUESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 2021 Think your venison’s too gamey? This chef says you’re not cooking it right By GRETCHEN McKAY Pittsburgh Post-Gazette PITTSBURGH — Dave Racicot has been a deer hunter longer than he’s been a professional chef, which is to say: a very long time. The Indiana, Pennsyl- vania, native was around 10 when he starting hunting with his maternal grand- father, Joseph Farine. He quickly discovered it can be pretty boring sitting in a stand for hours at a time, patiently and quietly waiting for a buck or doe to wander within sight. “I went every year with Pap,” recalls Racicot, 43, who’s been executive chef at The Commoner restaurant in Hotel Monaco, Down- town, since 2019. “And it was always boring, cold and wet.” What made it worth it was the fact the family got to eat venison when- ever someone was fortunate enough to harvest a deer. “Everyone who says they hate it or don’t like it, it’s been overcooked.” “It just tastes so good,” he says of the meat, which, depending on the cut, was roasted, dried into jerky, stuff ed into sausage or turned into a spicy, hearty chili. Racicot continued that tradition when he grew up and switched to archery hunting, which he says is more challenging, emotional and intimate than hunting with a gun. “If I didn’t enjoy eating [deer meat], I wouldn’t do it,” he says. While he has yet to har- vest a deer this year, he still has plenty of venison in a deep freezer in his Oakmont basement from previous years, all of which he pro- cessed himself from start to fi nish. He has some in the fridge in his garage too. Not a fan of venison? You’re not alone. Deservedly or not, deer meat has some- thing of a bad rap outside of the hunting community. Racicot has heard the rea- sons why a thousand times, and shakes his head every time: It’s too dry! It tastes gamey! It’s not safe to eat! Actually, says the chef who has cooked at Nema- colin Woodlands Resort’s Lautrec, Notion and Poulet Bleu, if your venison dish tastes lousy, well, it’s because you’re not cooking it right. “Everyone who says they hate it or don’t like it, it’s been overcooked,” he says. But serve it rare to medium, and “it’s amazing.” Rich in iron and full of B vitamins, venison is lower in fat and calories than beef. Because it’s so lean, and fat protects against inexperi- enced cooking, it’s pretty easy to overcook and dry it out. In addition, poorly pro- cessed meat just won’t taste good. Deer can only hang in coolers for a limited time before spoilage begins, and this year’s shortage of pro- cessors means some hunters may end up butchering their deer themselves, even if they don’t know how. To create a winning dish, you not only need to cook it properly — hot and fast for tender cuts like steaks and chops, and low and slow for the tougher round or shoulder — but also make sure you procure it from a trusted source. In Pennsylvania, it’s illegal to sell deer meat unless it’s farm-raised and BAKERS Steve Mellon/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette-TNS inspected. But the good news is, even if you aren’t friends with a generous hunter, venison is fairly easy to fi nd around here. It will, however, come from a farm instead of the woods, and it likely won’t be the white-tailed species you see in Pennsylvania’s woods. Most retail ven- ison, including that from Highbourne Deer Farms in Dallastown, York County, comes from red deer raised on pasture, grain and hay. It generally costs a bit more than beef. Strip Dis- trict Meats sells ground ven- ison from New Zealand for $11.99 per pound. The store also has venison bistro fi lets ($62.99 for 3 pounds), ven- ison medallions ($27.99 for four 4-ounce medallions), venison tenderloins ($55.99) and a venison Frenched rack ($78.99). All are vacu- um-packed and frozen. You also can purchase it online or by mail order through retailers such as Whole Foods, Cabela’s and D’Artagnan. Its relatively high price is why you don’t often fi nd venison on restaurant menus, says Racicot. It can easily run $48 a pound, with fi ne dining places often charging upwards of $42 for a prepared 5-ounce por- tion, “which is a really small piece of meat,” he says. “So it’s diffi cult.” To drive home how easy it is to cook a piece of ven- ison well, Racicot recently prepared a 6-ounce tender- loin from his private stash in The Commoner’s commer- cial kitchen. After covering the steak with a very generous amount of salt — a lot of it falls off in the pan, he explains — he crushes a couple cloves of garlic on the stainless-steel counter with the palm of his hand, peels it and sets it aside with a small bundle of fresh thyme and half a sliced shallot. Placing a small carbon steel skillet on the burner over high heat (you can use any thick pan you’re com- fortable with), he pours in 3 tablespoons of grapeseed oil, a neutral oil prized for its high smoke point. When the oil sizzles and emits a slight whiff of smoke, he places the tenderloin in the pan. “You want it hot and fast initially,” he says. After about 2 minutes, he turns the steak over, adds 3 tablespoons of butter and immediately turns down the heat. After the butter melts into the oil, he adds garlic, shallot and thyme, and starts spooning the fragrant, siz- zling liquid over the steak again and again. “This is where the cooking process happens,” he says. While it’s not neces- sary, basting allows the meat to cook faster and more evenly. Four minutes later, when the steak is a golden, caramel brown, the chef declares it done. The entire kitchen smells terrifi c. After letting the meat rest for at least 4 minutes — 133- 135 degrees is right for mid- rare to medium — he slices it across the grain, plates it with the aromatics and spoons a simple huckleberry gastrique on top. “The longer you let it sit without it getting cold, the better,” he notes. A taste reveals Racicot is on the money: While you can tell you’re not eating beef, it doesn’t taste gamey, just dis- tinctive in a good way. When he cooks ven- ison at home for his wife, Kelly, Racicot typically pre- pares it with winter spices and roasted root vegeta- bles because “it just makes sense.” It’s a little more upscale served on the job, with braised red cabbage, caramelized apples and sauces made with beets and juniper berries. “See?” he says with a smile after a reporter takes two bites. “It’s good!” VENISON CHILI “This recipe works well, it’s easy to make and any number of sub- stitutions can be made and it’s still tasty,” Racicot says. He likes to garnish it with cheese and sour cream, with some crusty bread or oyster crackers on the side. Cocoa powder adds to its depth and richness. 3 tablespoons olive oil 1 cup diced onion 1cup diced peppers 1 habanero (optional) 6 cloves garlic, smashed and chopped 3 tablespoons chili powder 1 ½ tablespoon cumin ¼ tablespoon cayenne ½ tablespoon cinnamon 2 pounds ground venison 12 ounces beer (Iron City, of course) 24-ounce can chopped tomatoes 6 ounces tomato paste 15-ounce can kidney beans, optional ¼ cup cocoa powder Salt, to taste Shredded cheese, scallions and sour cream, for serving Add oil to large, heavy-bot- tomed pan set over moderate heat. Add onion, peppers and habanero (if using) and cook until peppers are tender, 7-10 minutes. Add garlic and cook until fragrant, about 30 seconds, then add spices and venison. Cook, breaking meat up with a spoon, until it’s no longer pink, about 5 minutes. Add beer, chopped tomatoes, tomato paste and kidney beans (if using) and stir well. Add cocoa powder and stir well to combine, then season with salt. Reduce heat to low and cook chili for a few hours, stirring occasionally as it thickens. Serve hot in a bowl with what- ever garnish you like. Serves 8. — Chef David Racicot, The Commoner change of pace this time of year,” Voll said. “You can only eat so much pie.” Continued from Page B1 Transfer to a lightly fl oured surface and form dough into a 7-inch round. Cut the circle in half, then cut each half into 4 pie- shaped wedges. Place the scones on the baking sheet. Brush tops with a little milk or egg wash. Bake 18 to 20 minutes or until golden brown. A toothpick will come out clean. The scones are always best the day they are baked. They can freeze well for one month. New recipe for honey pudding delights Thanksgiving guests Venison prepared by Dave Racicot, executive chef at The Commoner restaurant in Hotel Monaco in Pittsburgh. THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD — B3 Even with all the baking she does at the bakery and her home during the holi- days, Jenny Voll can’t help but try new recipes this time of year, especially when they come so highly recommended by one of her employees. “One of our newer employees — we had a potluck and she brought this in,” said Voll, man- ager of the Golden Delight bakery in Gahanna. “She’d been talking about it for months. We all went crazy for it. I’ve already made it two times and my sister has made it, too.” The honey pudding defi nitely lived up to the hype. All 10 people Voll hosted for Thanksgiving loved the dish and it’s already on the menu for Christmas festivities, but she said she’ll most likely double the recipe then. “One time around for everybody is just not enough,” she said with a laugh. The recipe is pretty simple, especially for a homemade pudding, as it just requires constant stir- ring and making sure the consistency is right. Voll recommends making sure the mixture thickens on the stove and if it’s still a little watery, bakers can add a little more cornstarch. Plus, she said the sweet honey fl avoring is a great addition to the holidays. “It goes well with Christmas,” she said. “I feel like the honey pudding is very comforting.” She added that it could be used as a topping on cake or ice cream, but her family prefers it by itself. “We really like honey in our family — it’s a nat- ural sweetener,” she said. “When we travel, we like to try to pick up diff erent honeys.” The cookbook the recipe comes from — “The Elder Scrolls: The Offi - cial Cookbook” by Chelsea Monroe-Casse — says the taste can vary slightly depending on what kind of honey is used. Voll said she enjoys the creaminess and although the pudding needs to be refrigerated to harden, she defi nitely sneaks a few bites while it’s still warm. “Pudding is a nice HONEY PUDDING Makes 4 servings 2 cups whole milk 1 whole vanilla bean, or 1 teaspoon extract ½ cup honey 1 cup heavy cream or whipping cream 3 tablespoons cornstarch 3 egg yolks Pinch salt Pour the milk into a medium pot over medium heat. Split the vanilla bean down the middle with a sharp knife and scrape out the seeds. Add the seeds and the pod to the pot of milk, and bring to just under a boil. If using vanil- la extract, just pour it in. Add the honey and stir for a few minutes to allow the vanilla to steep into the milk. Fish out the pod, scrape any remaining seeds from it and discard. In a separate bowl, whisk together the heavy cream, cornstarch, egg yolks and salt. While still whisking, pour a little of the hot milk into the bowl to temper the mixture, then pour everything into the pot. Cook for about fi ve minutes more, stirring all the while, until the mixture has thickened notice- ably. Remove from heat, strain into a clean bowl, and cover with plastic. Chill for at least an hour to help the pudding set. Customers wait all year for beautiful, puff y springerle The requests for the Original Goodie Shop’s springerle start coming long before Thanksgiving, even though Debbie Smith and her two daughters make them only during the holiday season. However, people are more than willing to wait for them. “They’re some- thing people seek out,” said Smith, whose father bought the Upper Arlington bakery in 1967. “People come in asking for them because they can’t fi nd them anywhere else.” She’s not sure where the recipe came from — whether her father got it from the man he bought the shop from, his mother or somewhere else — for the anise-fl avored German cookies. All Smith knows is they are a favorite of her family and customers, alike. She suspects it’s because they have an embossed design on them created by a resin press (usually featuring depic- tions of olden days, such as gristmills or fl owers), making them unique. But it also could be their fl uffi ness as they “poof up like a pillow” in the oven. In fact, they are called springerle after the German word for “jump.” “Some people like to dry them out and dunk them in coff ee, others eat them right out of the oven,” Smith said. “My mother always sat them out for a week before she ate them.” She said that although the recipe is fairly simple, the cookies can be time-consuming because bakers have to let them sit for 24 hours for the imprint to set and then, they’re baked in a low temperature oven. As far as the press goes, people can buy them at a few online shops. (Smith knows as she sadly had to replace her decades-old one in 2009 after it went missing.) She and her daughters are always thrilled to pull out that press each holiday season. “I just saw a lady in here who said, ‘I’ve been buying these for 50 years,’” Smith said. “Food and goodies are some of our favorite things this time of year and they’re linked to memories. Like you eat Grandma’s cookies and it takes you right back to that kitchen. Those things do make you happy.” GERMAN SPRINGERLE Makes 150 cookies 1 pound, 12 ounces whole egg (roughly 14 eggs) 3 pounds, 4 ounces granulated sugar ½ ounce salt 6 ounces powdered sugar ¼ ounce ammonia bicarbonate 15 drops anise oil ¾ ounce anise (½ ground, ½ seeds) 2 pounds pastry fl our 3 pounds cake fl our Heat oven to 335 degrees. Whip eggs, sugar and salt in a large bowl. Then, incorporate powdered sugar, ammonia bicar- bonate, anise oil, ground anise and anise seeds into whipped mixture. Sieve the fl ours into a large bowl. Add whipped mixture to the sieved fl our and mix by hand. Flour your surface or baking sheet and place dough on top. Cover with a damp cloth. Roll dough in workable amounts to about ½-inch-thick. Imprint with your springerle press. Cut the cookies. If the dough gets too stiff , mist with water and knead. Let the cut cookies rest, uncovered, for at least 6 hours or up to a day. Bake at 335 with door cracked open for 30 minutes. Then check for golden bottoms. M ICHAEL 541-786-8463 M. Curtiss PN-7077A CCB# 183649 A C ERTIFIED M ASTER A RBORIST Are Your Feet tired of dashing thru the stores? We specialize in quality medical and surgical care Travis T. Hampton, D.P.M. for all types of Foot and Ankle Surgeon foot and ankle problems. Gift Certificates and Tap That Swag available for Christmas Family Friendly Location! NEW MENU! Bar Bites, Wood Stone Pizza and More! 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