Chicago Sun-Times

Happiest plates on earth

Dove breasts in bacon are five- star dining served by the outdoors

- DALE BOWMAN DALE BOWMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES

Dreams of grilled dove breasts wrapped in bacon distracted me last week while I pulled together the column on dove hunting.

Grilled, bacon- wrapped dove breasts are about my favorite outdoors meal, if I throw in the caveat that it needs to be something I caught, shot or foraged.

I’ve had memorable feeds while hunting or fishing. Numerous ones with Joe McCartin come to mind: a breakfast/ brunch in a boat duck blind, where we busted ice while hunting with guide Todd Gessner on Rend Lake; guide Dustan Harley setting up a redchecker­ed tablecloth on a table, then whipping out marinated steak and preparing it by the secret river in which we were fly fishing for steelhead in southwest Michigan.

But that’s different. Here I’m talking about game, fish or forage gathered, then prepped and eaten.

Part of the reason that baconwrapp­ed dove breasts stick out is because September is also a good time of year in gardening, too, with the last of the sweet corn and the peak of tomatoes. Field to table, if you will.

Mike Arndt introduced me to bacon- wrapped dove breasts years ago. But the recipe has been around in various forms long before him.

My version is marinating the bone- in dove breasts in olive oil, fresh- squeezed lime juice, garlic and fresh herbs ( or going the simple route of Italian dressing), then wrapping in bacon. A strip will go around about twice. Then you impale it on a soaked wooden skewer.

There are two major variations. Arndt recommende­d stuffing with cheese, but it never worked well for me, so I stopped trying. What does work well for me is putting a sliver of jalapeño under the bacon slice on each side of the breast. In early September, I have just- picked jalapeños piled everywhere. When I have enough dove breasts to cook for the whole family, I do half with jalapeño slices and half without.

Dove breasts are relative morsels, and the daily bag in Illinois is 15 doves. So a limit of doves feeds five light eaters — more realistica­lly three. You can also use them as conversati­onstoking hors d’oeuvres.

To finish off the field- to- table, I suggest serving with thick, fresh tomato slices and boiled, justpicked sweet corn. I’ve seen fancy suggestion­s for wine pairings, but the basic one is pinot noir.

Food memories of simple perfection come to mind: Trying to mimic the way the Army and the legendary South Side soul food place Lou’s used to do their catfish steaks. Deer backstraps, many times and places. Broiling or deep- frying fresh- caught yellow perch, then serving with berries if early in the year, or sweet corn and tomatoes in the summer. Spring coho steamed in foil with lemon, garlic and soy sauce. Morels in May, sauteed with garlic, butter and olive oil, then served with buttered long bread.

My all- time favorite meal outdoors was by a mountain stream. It began with catching a brook trout. When the fire was going, I pulled out a pan, butter and salt and pepper. Then I cleaned the trout, which clean easily, and immediatel­y put it into hot butter. The ambiance of laurel, spruce and gurgling mountain stream properly seasoned the whole deal. Simple and perfect. Follow me on Twitter @ BowmanOuts­ide.

 ??  ?? Grilled dove breasts wrapped in bacon ( above, left) can be served with produce of the season, a perch plate can be simple or complex and meals with morels ( right) can be elaborate, but simplicity is the way to go.
Grilled dove breasts wrapped in bacon ( above, left) can be served with produce of the season, a perch plate can be simple or complex and meals with morels ( right) can be elaborate, but simplicity is the way to go.
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