Dan on the Rock asked about cooking and eating snipe. As snipe are small birds - it takes more than a few of them to provide a real meal. I combined
the two I killed recently with a single dove to make some tapas before a more substantial meal of grouse in blackberry/pepper sauce. After a long day in the field, the expedience of just breasting the birds out seems to be the way to go. If you have more time, a plucked and roasted bird is a perhaps more fitting way to prepare them. If you're short of snipe recipes, they can always be cooked in the same way as woodcock, though woodcock may provide slightly more meat. The first game birds I ever managed to kill were woodcock near Williamsburg Virginia.
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Snipe and dove breast tapas. |
Sauteed Snipe Breast on Toasted Baguette RoundsIngredients: As many snipe breasts as you can muster; butter; salt, freshly ground pepper and a medium hot chili powder; rounds cut from a baguette; and (optionally) a few drops of truffle oil.Method: Breast out the birds. Salt and pepper the breasts and sprinkle on a dash of chili powder. I use Fernandez Chilie Molido Puro which is available in my Safeway store in 7 oz. bags. Slice the baguette into thin rounds - about 1/4". Melt a generous portion of butter in a frying pan, add a drop or two of truffle oil and then dip the bread into the butter and place them on a plate in a warm oven. Add the breasts to the butter and brown them on both sides until medium rare. Place them on the toast and enjoy with a favorite glass of wine. A dry white or a light red like a Pinot Noir goes well.
There is
a nice web site devoted to snipe hunting. They have a
list of recipes including the old standby, snipe wrapped in bacon. Also a favorite way of mine to cook dove - wrap a small piece of jalapeno in the breast and then wrap the breast with bacon - grill until the bacon is nicely browned. Hank Shaw at
Hunter, Angler, Gardener, Cook has done
some nice writing about snipe. He has a somewhat elaborate
recipe and a
plainer one too. The Derrydale Game Cookbook by L. P. Gouy lists 24 recipes for woodcock and any could be used for snipe as well.