Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Late-season rabbits make delicious meals for winter dinners

- BY KEITH SUTTON Contributi­ng Writer

For most of us, February is the last month we’ll have a chance to hunt till the early seasons roll around again next fall. This is also rabbit time. The season for hunting cottontail­s and swamp rabbits remains open statewide through Feb. 28, and many Arkansas hunters are enjoying a last taste of the winter outdoors while gathering fresh game for the dinner table.

We’ ll be among these late-season nimrods, hoping to bag a few rabbits to eat. A few will make it to the freezer to tide us over until the next small-game season. Most, however, will be cooked fresh from the field. We love a hot game meal when it’s still cold outside, and as far as we’re concerned, no game is more delicious than rabbit.

Few wild game meats are as delectable and versatile. Rabbit is delicate, white and lean, with just a hint of gaminess. It can be cooked in every conceivabl­e way, from simply fried, baked or roasted to stews, casseroles and pies. The taste is comparable to that of chicken, and recipes for the two are interchang­eable.

Rabbits were the first game animals I pursued and the first I learned to cook. Perhaps that’s why they’re still my favorite, on the table and in the field.

When I was younger, I hunted cottontail­s every week of the season, and whenever I camped with friends, we would kill several rabbits for dinner and spit-roast them over a campfire with nothing more than a sprinkling of salt and pepper to season them. Those rabbits were especially good because we ate them right there where we killed them, fresh from nature’s larder. They were good because we had killed them. They were good because they were cooked over a campfire built in the fresh air of a cold winter night with the barred owls calling around us and the stars twinkling overhead.

That’s when all game is best, we think — when you’re out there and you can feel that primitive, deep-down-in-yoursoul connection with the animal you’re eating. It’s a feeling you never forget, a feeling that tells you this is right; this is the way it was meant to be. One animal dies and is eaten by another, and in the eating, a circle is completed.

Later in life, when I discovered an interest in cooking wild-game dishes, rabbit became the basis for many of my experiment­s. It proved itself delicious in scores of different ways — basted in a rich barbecue sauce, smothered in fiery sauce piquant, slow-cooked in a thick brown gravy, fried in a crunchy coating of corn flakes and butter, diced in a quick-made hash. I have never found a bad recipe in which rabbit was the main ingredient.

Here are some of the ways I’ll be serving up rabbits this year. Perhaps you’ll enjoy these recipes, too.

FRIED RABBIT, ARKANSAS STYLE

Ingredient­s: 1 rabbit, cut in serving pieces 1 1/8 cups water

1 hot pepper

4 garlic cloves, sliced

1 cup milk

2 eggs, slightly beaten Flour well-seasoned with salt

and pepper

1/2 cup shortening

Directions:

Parboil the rabbit in water with pepper and garlic until tender but not yet falling off the bones. Drain. Combine the milk and eggs in a shallow bowl. Dip the rabbit pieces in the egg mixture, dredge in seasoned flour, and fry in heated shortening until done to taste. Serves 2 to 3.

GRANDMA’S RABBIT STEW

Ingredient­s:

2 teaspoons salt

1 teaspoon freshly ground

black pepper

1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper 2 rabbits, cut in serving pieces 5 cups water

2 cups coarsely shredded cabbage 2 cups fresh or frozen whole-kernel

corn

1 cup chopped onion

2/3 cup chopped green onions 1 cup diced potatoes

1/2 cup peeled and sliced carrots 1/2 cup chopped canned tomatoes 1/4 cup green beans

1/4 cup chopped celery

1/4 cup tomato sauce

1/4 cup tomato paste

1/4 cup uncooked rice

1 clove garlic, minced Directions:

Combine salt, black pepper and cayenne, and use the mixture to season the rabbit pieces. Brown the rabbit in vegetable oil heated in a large stew pot. Add the remaining ingredient­s, and stir well. Bring to a boil; then reduce the heat and simmer, loosely covered, 2 to 3 hours or until the rabbit and vegetables are tender. Serves 10 to 12.

RABBIT WITH MUSHROOM SAUCE

Ingredient­s:

1 cottontail rabbit, cut in serving

pieces

1 cup flour

2 teaspoons salt

1 teaspoon black pepper 4 tablespoon­s vegetable oil

1 (10 3/4-ounce) can condensed

cream of mushroom soup 1 (8-ounce) carton sour cream 1 (4-ounce) can sliced mushrooms,

drained

1/3 cup dry sherry

Directions:

Place the rabbit in a large pot, cover with water, and parboil, covered, until tender. Dredge the rabbit pieces in a mixture of the flour, salt and pepper, and brown lightly in a skillet with vegetable oil. Combine the remaining ingredient­s in a saucepan to make mushroom sauce. Cook over medium heat, stirring occasional­ly, until thoroughly heated. Serve the rabbit pieces with sauce spooned on top. Serves 2 to 3.

SLOWCOOKED CANECUTTER IN MOLASSES BARBECUE SAUCE

Ingredient­s:

1 swamp rabbit (canecutter), cut in

serving pieces

Salt to taste

2/3 cup chicken broth

1/4 cup molasses

1/4 cup ketchup 1/4 cup red-wine vinegar 1 tablespoon Worcesters­hire sauce 1 tablespoon minced onion

Directions:

Season the meat pieces with salt. Place them in a slow cooker. Mix the remaining ingredient­s, and pour over the meat. Cover and cook on low 8 hours. Serves 4 to 6.

RABBIT SMOTHERED IN ONIONS

Ingredient­s:

2 small young rabbits, cut in serving

pieces

Salt and cayenne pepper to taste 1 cup vegetable oil

1/3 cup flour

2 medium onions, thinly sliced 1 small bell pepper, chopped Water

Directions:

Season the rabbit with salt and cayenne, and brown in oil in a deep cast-iron skillet or Dutch oven. Sprinkle flour on the rabbit pieces as they brown. When all the rabbit is browned, add the onions, bell pepper and 1/2 cup warm water. Cover the pot, and cook on low heat about 1 hour or until the rabbit is tender, adding small amounts of water as necessary to prevent sticking. When ready to serve, add a small amount of milk to the pan drippings to make gravy. Serve over cooked rice. Serves 2 to 4.

 ?? KEITH SUTTON/CONTRIBUTI­NG PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Fewer hunters pursue rabbits now than in decades past, but those who taste cottontail­s and swamp rabbits cooked in dishes like this Fried Rabbit, Arkansas Style are likely to bring home every rabbit they can get.
KEITH SUTTON/CONTRIBUTI­NG PHOTOGRAPH­ER Fewer hunters pursue rabbits now than in decades past, but those who taste cottontail­s and swamp rabbits cooked in dishes like this Fried Rabbit, Arkansas Style are likely to bring home every rabbit they can get.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States