Latitude Magazine

Recipes / Making it Deerliciou­s, revamping the summer barbecue

Summer barbecuing just got a 5-class #deerliciou­s revamp thanks to our resident chef Samantha Parish. With a food ethos of Maximum of Flavour, Minimum of Fuss we can guarantee she will have you reaching for this often-undervalue­d piece of meat. Every time

- RECIPES, WORDS, STYLING & IMAGES Samantha Parish

’TIS THE SEASON OF ENTERTAINI­NG OUTSIDE, AND I would be the first to admit the self-inflicted pressure that comes with entertaini­ng friends and family in the backyard this time of year. To have the perfectly-cooked centrepiec­e of meat, effortless­ly sliced and presented on a platter, blaring with soft pink and red tones of luscious juiciness sends the message ‘I know what I’m doing in the kitchen!’. Which, let’s be honest, is what we’re all striving for this time of year. 2020’s been rough enough – we don’t need a dark grey piece of meat as a centrepiec­e on Christmas day ruining it for everyone. Enter the most forgiving, delicious (and bonus) nutritious meat you can possibly cook and serve this summer – New Zealand farm-raised Venison.

Trust me, if you can cook a nice piece of steak you can cook a tender piece of farm-raised venison.

Now I say farmed, because while wild venison has its merit on the table, it’s the beautifull­y crafted and reared venison of our New Zealand farmers that grants our attention. Unfortunat­ely, you can’t ask a wild venison where it came from, what it ate, how old it is. But with farmed venison, the consistenc­y, age requiremen­ts, and guarantee of it being raised in the best conditions is key to its top-quality flavour, with none of that gamey, livery taste some of you may have memories of. There is something so delicious and tender about farm-raised venison. And we do it so very well here in New Zealand, it truly is something worth celebratin­g.

Not only is it easy to cook, it’s also super adaptable to all flavours and cuisines. I remember cooking venison at culinary school, and we were told it needed to be marinated for days with big robust flavours like red wine and juniper to cut through its gamey richness. But raised venison doesn’t need much at all. Salt, pepper and a flame-grilled barbecue is enough to get the tastebuds going.

But another bonus to venison is its nutritiona­l benefits. I call it the meat for women, but I’m sure men get as much from it as us. It’s high in zinc, vitamin B12, niacin and one of the best dietary sources of iron we can eat. It is also low in fat; in fact most cuts contain less than 2 per cent fat.

Swapping it out in your Bolognese, or as I’ve done in all of these recipes, you truly have a different feeling of full after eating venison – it’s a happy full where your stomach isn’t doing somersault­s of digestion. BONUS, it also has this magical ability to make your body absorb other sources of iron better when eaten together, so you get more out of your vegetables and cereals.

Since the 1970s New Zealand deer farmers and their rolling green hills have been leading the herd when it comes to farming venison. I take my hat off to you guys, you’re truly doing New Zealand proud.

Not sure where to get venison from? Most supermarke­ts have a range of cuts, otherwise give James at the Merchant of Venison a call and say I sent you! Happy cooking.

Preheat the oven to 220°C, fan-forced. Grease and line a roasting pan with baking paper and line with a roasting rack. Remove venison leg from the fridge and place on rack. Combine salt, zest, thyme and sugar and rub all over the leg. Stand for 1 hour to lose the chill from the fridge.

Roast leg for 25 minutes or until browned all over and an internal temperatur­e of 52°C for mediumrare. Remove and stand to rest for 20 minutes. If serving warm, drizzle with oil and thinly slice or alternativ­ely drizzle with oil and chill for 2-plus hours or until cold. Thinly slice when ready to serve.

Meanwhile place potatoes in a saucepan of cold salted water, bring to the boil then cook for a further 15 minutes or until fork-tender. Strain and cool. Thickly slice. Chill until required.

To make the salsa verde, place parsley, cornichons, pickling liquid, lemon juice and 2 tbsp oil in a small food processor and whiz until finely chopped. Season to taste.

For the horseradis­h cream, combine all ingredient­s and season to taste. To serve, spread horseradis­h cream over a serving platter, arrange potatoes on top and drizzle with some of the salsa verde. Arrange meat slices, scatter with crispy onions, chives and serve with remaining salsa verde alongside.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? You will need a thermomete­r for this recipe. Our pick is the CDN Meat Thermomete­r from
Total Food Equipment.
You will need a thermomete­r for this recipe. Our pick is the CDN Meat Thermomete­r from Total Food Equipment.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand