Recent

Check Out Our Forum Tab!

Click On The "Forum" Tab Under The Logo For More Content!
If you are using your phone, click on the menu, then select forum. Make sure you refresh the page!

The views of the poster, may not be the views of the website of "Minnesota Outdoorsman" therefore we are not liable for what our members post, they are solely responsible for what they post. They agreed to a user agreement when signing up to MNO.

Author Topic: 5 Common Mistakes to Avoid When Cooking Venison  (Read 3320 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline HD

  • Administrator
  • Master Outdoorsman
  • *
  • Posts: 15871
  • Karma: +57/-23
  • #1 Judge (Retired)
    • Minnesota Outdoorsman
With whitetail season over, hopefully you’ve had a bit of luck out there. Maybe you even got yourself a nice pair of trophy antlers to go along with the true take-home trophy – the meat! While venison turns into excellent sausage and jerky, opinions are a little more varied when it comes to just straight up cooking it. Unfortunately, that might be because, at one point or another, they had a venison meal from someone who cooked it wrong. Incredibly lean and easy to dry out, many cooks make the mistake of cooking venison like it is a piece of beef. In reality, more care needs to be taken so it doesn’t end up gamey and dry.

Mistake #1 – Cooking Venison Like Beef

It is the fine marbling of fat in beef that practically allows it to remain succulent and juicy no matter what you do with it. However, venison does not have the same marbling and it loses moisture in a different way. When beef is cooked, it leaks out melted fat and moisture into the pan or on the grill, but with venison that moisture rises up like invisible meat smoke.

Searing the venison steak in a cast iron pan with some olive oil is one way to trap in the moisture.  Another way is to marinade, which not only adds moisture, but also tenderizes the meat. Typically, marinades are reserved for the tougher cuts of meat, while a backstrap or tenderloin needs nothing more than a little salt and pepper.

As far as marinades go, you can try some of our favorite wild game marinades or these household staples:

    Italian dressing
    Teriyaki
    Red wine
    Barbecue

Allow for at least six hours of soaking and cook it as you will. Not only will you have some great moist meat, but it will have a great flavor too.

Mistake #2 – Keeping the Fat On

You think you have solved the problem of dry venison, right? You will just keep the fat on. Problem solved. Unfortunately, while beef fat is great-tasting, venison fat is not. It keeps the consistency of candles and coats the inside of your mouth. Worst of all, excessive venison fat is one of the main reasons people call it “gamey”. Just trim away the fat and silver skin so people can taste the meat and not the candle stuck to the side of it.

Mistake #3 – Adding Salt

Definitely don’t season your venison steak like a normal steak before placing it on the grill. As venison is already a lean meat and easily dries out, you don’t want too much salt on there, turning it into jerky before your eyes. If you are going to salt it, do it lightly or do it in the marinade beforehand. Otherwise, let your guests salt after the meat is cooked.

Mistake #4 – Slicing Too Thin Before Cooking

If you are making venison steaks, make them thick, otherwise it is best to cook this meat in a roast form. This is yet another time venison gets mistaken for another meat. Most people think it cooks as slow as beef, but it actually cooks quite quickly. That means that if you cut thin steaks and cook them like a beef or pork steaks, it will end up quite dry. Just remember to cut thick, cook short, and cut thin afterwards.

Mistake #5 – Cooking out the Pink

Does everyone at your table like their meat well done? Well, too bad! You want to cook your venison until it reaches a temperature of 145° F (the recommended “safe to eat” temperature) and then remove it off the grill. Providing it wasn’t cut too thin, it should just be slightly pink on the inside. If it is still pink on the inside that means it is still nice and moist in there too. If you cook out all the pink like you would with pork, expect some terribly dry meat.
Mama always said, If you ain't got noth'in nice to say, don't say noth'in at all!

Offline Rebel SS

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 26405
  • Karma: +185/-50
  • "Seems like time is here and gone".....Doobie's
Good post! Just don't let Del read #1 about searing the meat. He'll be all over ya.   ;)

Online glenn57

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 47547
  • Karma: +208/-192
  • 2015 deer contest champ!!!
Good post! Just don't let Del read #1 about searing the meat. He'll be all over ya.   ;)
:rotflmao: :rotflmao: he'd just boil it anyway.
2015 deer slayer!!!!!!!!!!

Offline delcecchi

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 3694
  • Karma: +19/-374
145 is too high.  Salt as a dry or wet brine keeps meat from drying out, and marinades only affect the outer layer of the meat.  Searing seals in nothing.

Great collection of folklore there.

Anything else?


Offline Rebel SS

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 26405
  • Karma: +185/-50
  • "Seems like time is here and gone".....Doobie's
Marinades only affect the OUTER layer of the meat???!?! So, a chunk of meat soaking completely submerged in a marinade for 24 hours or more only has the outer layer affected??! Define "outer layer"...no, wait, DON'T!! All I'll say is that after soaking my super thick pig chops in apple juice overnite, they're the only ones I've seen that have juice run out when ya cut 'em...
Whatever works for ya, Del.  :rolleyes:
« Last Edit: February 02/26/17, 10:20:32 AM by Rebel SS »

Online glenn57

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 47547
  • Karma: +208/-192
  • 2015 deer contest champ!!!
I agree Reb. Occasionally I marinade venison cause my wife will eat the marinaded venny when I throw it on the grill. And it is marinaded all the way thru. Nice try Del.
2015 deer slayer!!!!!!!!!!

Offline delcecchi

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 3694
  • Karma: +19/-374
If you put salt in the marinade it becomes a brine.  That helps keep meat juicy.  And even if the flavor is on the outside layer you still taste it.

Here is what Cooks Illustrated found with testing....

MYTH: Marinades Penetrate Meat Deeply

FACT: Most Impact is Superficial

Contrary to popular belief, marinades do most of their work on the surface of meat or just below. Some ingredients in a marinade do penetrate the meat—but only by a few millimeters (and oil-soluble herbs and spices in the mix merely add flavor to the exterior). To prove the point, we soaked beef short ribs in red wine for intervals from one hour to 18, then measured the band of purple created by the wine. Our finding? Even after 18 hours of soaking, the wine penetrated less than 1 millimeter. Additional testing with marinated boneless chicken breasts confirmed that the flavors of other kinds of soaking liquids do not penetrate to the center of the meat.

Offline Bobberineyes

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 6556
  • Karma: +36/-17
                    :popcorn:                       :popcorn:
« Last Edit: February 02/26/17, 12:57:56 PM by Bobberineyes »

Offline Rebel SS

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 26405
  • Karma: +185/-50
  • "Seems like time is here and gone".....Doobie's
Ya gonna share that p'corn, boob? I've got the cream sodies.... :cheesy:

Offline Bobberineyes

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 6556
  • Karma: +36/-17

Offline Rebel SS

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 26405
  • Karma: +185/-50
  • "Seems like time is here and gone".....Doobie's
HAHAHAHA! Thanky, boob! I gotta dive into a braunschweiger and onion sammy before the Daytona starts. The breath will fend off NL#1 and #2 long enough to get me thru the Daytona.  :rotflmao:

Offline Auggie

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 1133
  • Karma: +7/-1
  • Start'em young
    • www.wallhangerstaxidermystudio.com
I like to cook mine partially frozen. Always get a nice browned outer crust layer with a juicy pink center. No matter what I season with
Shane Augeson
Wallhangers Taxidermy Studio
9040 40th St NW
Milan MN 56262
www.wallhangerstaxidermystudio.com
320-269-3337