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Venison Ham Roast Recipes
Posted on 1/31/19 at 11:23 am
Posted on 1/31/19 at 11:23 am
What's the best recipe y'all have for a crock pot deer roast?
Posted on 1/31/19 at 11:25 am to LSUtoTulaneLaw
Good luck. It may be dry.
Posted on 1/31/19 at 11:43 am to LSUtoTulaneLaw
Whole ham? Top round? Bottom round? Sirloin? Shank?
Posted on 1/31/19 at 11:47 am to LSUtoTulaneLaw
chopped vegetables and soup mix
Posted on 1/31/19 at 12:02 pm to LSUtoTulaneLaw
Gonna be dry no matter what you do to it.. slice it and fry it. Grind it with beef and make burger or grind it with pork to make sausage.
Posted on 1/31/19 at 12:05 pm to LSUtoTulaneLaw
Front shoulders and shanks make great crock pot roasts. Made one Sunday night and it came out awesome with the entire front shoulder (bone in) from a doe. You want a cut with a lot of connective tissue and more fat that'll render down in the cooking process. On Sunday, I seasoned and browned the meat on all sides, then placed it in the crock pot. I then sauteed some celery, garlic and onion in the skillet I seasoned the meat with making sure to scrape up all the tasty bits. Then I added 1 can of rotel, 4 cans of mushroom steak sauce (they're small cans if you're not familiar) and 2 pints of raw mushrooms and finally dumped all the sauteed veggies on top. Let that cook for a long time on low and its dynamite.
In my experience, the rear ham is lean with minimal connective tissue and does best in other applications. I would sear/brown the outside and then cook it in the oven @ 375F till the internal temp hits 120 or 125 in the middle. Let it rest for a little bit, then slice thin and serve with a gravy you made with drippings you caught during the roasting process.
ETA: if you roast it and slice thin as I described, it shouldn't be dry.
In my experience, the rear ham is lean with minimal connective tissue and does best in other applications. I would sear/brown the outside and then cook it in the oven @ 375F till the internal temp hits 120 or 125 in the middle. Let it rest for a little bit, then slice thin and serve with a gravy you made with drippings you caught during the roasting process.
ETA: if you roast it and slice thin as I described, it shouldn't be dry.
This post was edited on 1/31/19 at 12:06 pm
Posted on 1/31/19 at 12:07 pm to LSUtoTulaneLaw
My wife put a Deerham with some onion soup carrots and onions and potatoes in a crockpot cook it for eight hours and we called some friends over to have dinner with us.
The roast was terrible. My buddy waited two weeks to tell me he also thought it was terrible but ate it so my wife wouldn’t Think they were assholes.
The roast was terrible. My buddy waited two weeks to tell me he also thought it was terrible but ate it so my wife wouldn’t Think they were assholes.
Posted on 1/31/19 at 12:20 pm to LSUtoTulaneLaw
I’d slice it up, tenderized it and fry it
Posted on 1/31/19 at 12:34 pm to LSUtoTulaneLaw
Put your hands on some dental floss NOW.
Posted on 1/31/19 at 1:01 pm to LSUtoTulaneLaw
Ground meat or sausage for all non-backstrap, non-filet meat. Deer roast is dry and gamey. No thanks.
Posted on 1/31/19 at 1:18 pm to LSUtoTulaneLaw
I do mine using the Mississippi Pot Roast method.
1 Roast
1 stick of butter
1 packet of Ranch Dressing Mix
1 packet of Au Jus mix.
3-4 Pepporoncini Peppers
Salt and Pepper as needed.
Put roast/ham in crockpot, pour in dressing and au jus mix. Add in 3-4 Pepperoncinis and place stick of butter on top. Cook on low for 8 hours.
1 Roast
1 stick of butter
1 packet of Ranch Dressing Mix
1 packet of Au Jus mix.
3-4 Pepporoncini Peppers
Salt and Pepper as needed.
Put roast/ham in crockpot, pour in dressing and au jus mix. Add in 3-4 Pepperoncinis and place stick of butter on top. Cook on low for 8 hours.
Posted on 1/31/19 at 1:27 pm to Mr Wonderful
quote:
Deer roast is dry and gamey. No thanks.
That's what people say who don't know how to handle and cook game meat properly.
Posted on 1/31/19 at 1:28 pm to LSUtoTulaneLaw
Don’t crock pot that. Cook like steak.
Posted on 1/31/19 at 1:49 pm to LSUtoTulaneLaw
I can't believe all the responses with dry/gamey. Can we take a vote? I bet these are the same guys who soak they're deer in water for a week.
Even my 12 year old daughter loves deer roast with rice and gravy. I like mine with just Lipton onion soup mix cooked for 6-8 hours or until it peels apart with a fork.
My wife likes to cook it with potatoes and carrots with soup mix for the same amount of time.
I'm going to try the Mississippi pot roast recipe this year with the ranch mix, peppers, and butter. I have a hard time believing that won't be excellent as well.
Even my 12 year old daughter loves deer roast with rice and gravy. I like mine with just Lipton onion soup mix cooked for 6-8 hours or until it peels apart with a fork.
My wife likes to cook it with potatoes and carrots with soup mix for the same amount of time.
I'm going to try the Mississippi pot roast recipe this year with the ranch mix, peppers, and butter. I have a hard time believing that won't be excellent as well.
Posted on 1/31/19 at 2:42 pm to REB BEER
The problem I find is most people cook their roast/deer roast on high for 4-6 hours. It should be low for 6-8 hours. The result is not good.
Posted on 1/31/19 at 2:53 pm to lsu13lsu
I never have a problem with a seasoned and seared deer roast in a crock pot on low with beef broth, splash of red wine, translucent browned onion onions, garlic, on low until it's about 90 minutes out, add carrot, celery, potato until they're done and eat.
Posted on 1/31/19 at 2:56 pm to REB BEER
quote:
I can't believe all the responses with dry/gamey
I can. Most people don't know jack shite about how to cook deer meat outside of maybe a backstrap. That number elevates immensely the further you get into south Louisiana. I prefer using the shoulders or neck for braising/roasts, but the hindquarter will work too. Especially the bottom round and bottom butt.
Posted on 1/31/19 at 3:15 pm to LSUballs
If its like a stew, how are you guys getting it dry? I wouldn't "roast" it in the oven certainly. But I eat venison roasts all the time in a similar recipe above with the ranch mix but we use an italian seasoning packet, can of golden mushroom soup, and a can of cream of mushroom.
Also do a guiness stew, a red wine roast like the french version, etc.
As long as you have a gravy or liquid its not gonna be dry.
Also do a guiness stew, a red wine roast like the french version, etc.
As long as you have a gravy or liquid its not gonna be dry.
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