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Started By
Message
Made Deer Boudin This Weekend
Posted on 8/23/21 at 8:04 am
Posted on 8/23/21 at 8:04 am
This is something I have been wanting to attempt for a while now but it always seemed daunting. There wasn't a lot of great info out there online but my fiancé was out of town for the weekend so I decided to dive it and figure it out. The process is fairly straight forward. You don't need a meat grinder, just a sausage stuffer.
Ingredients:
5lb Deer
5lb Boston Butt
1lb Chicken Livers (I might add more next time or use pork liver. Deer liver varies so much it's hard to trust)
3 green bellpeppers
2 vidalia onions
2 green onions
1 bunch parsley
1 head of garlic
3 celery stalks
4 small but hot jalapenos from the garden
12 cups rice (cooked)
Step one is to get all of the meat and veggies (No green onion tops or parsley) in a pot and simmer it for 2-3 hours until its fork tender and shreds easily. Do not trim fat off the pork, you need the fat. Placed all the meat and veggies in a meat lug and seasoned with Cajun seasoning, garlic powder, and salt. Placed the lug in the fridge for a couple of hours.
Put all the contents of the lug into a big pot, add water just to the top of the meat, bring the mixture to a boil. lower temp to a simmer.
Simmer for at least 2 hours, probably closer to 3
^ The chunks of fat and the liquid fat layer on top are key here
Remove the contents with a strainer but do not discard the liquid. You will need it later. Let the liquid cool.
Add the green onion top and parsley leaves. Stir up the meat mix to shred it. If you have a kitchen aid or some mixer, this will come in handy.
>
Cook the rice while the meat is simmering, once the meat is shredded, add it to the rice.
Add the rendered fat off the top of the simmer liquid until you get a mixture that "looks and tastes right"
Stuff into hog casing, tie and twist, let sit in the fridge over night before vacuum sealing or wrapping. This lets the mixture firm up and bind with the rice and casing.
Cooked a small link in the oven and was very happy with the results.

Ingredients:
5lb Deer
5lb Boston Butt
1lb Chicken Livers (I might add more next time or use pork liver. Deer liver varies so much it's hard to trust)
3 green bellpeppers
2 vidalia onions
2 green onions
1 bunch parsley
1 head of garlic
3 celery stalks
4 small but hot jalapenos from the garden
12 cups rice (cooked)
Step one is to get all of the meat and veggies (No green onion tops or parsley) in a pot and simmer it for 2-3 hours until its fork tender and shreds easily. Do not trim fat off the pork, you need the fat. Placed all the meat and veggies in a meat lug and seasoned with Cajun seasoning, garlic powder, and salt. Placed the lug in the fridge for a couple of hours.
Put all the contents of the lug into a big pot, add water just to the top of the meat, bring the mixture to a boil. lower temp to a simmer.
Simmer for at least 2 hours, probably closer to 3
^ The chunks of fat and the liquid fat layer on top are key here
Remove the contents with a strainer but do not discard the liquid. You will need it later. Let the liquid cool.
Add the green onion top and parsley leaves. Stir up the meat mix to shred it. If you have a kitchen aid or some mixer, this will come in handy.
> Cook the rice while the meat is simmering, once the meat is shredded, add it to the rice.
Add the rendered fat off the top of the simmer liquid until you get a mixture that "looks and tastes right"
Stuff into hog casing, tie and twist, let sit in the fridge over night before vacuum sealing or wrapping. This lets the mixture firm up and bind with the rice and casing.
Cooked a small link in the oven and was very happy with the results.

This post was edited on 8/23/21 at 8:11 am
Posted on 8/23/21 at 8:12 am to mylsuhat
Looks good. It’s been on my list to try as well.
Posted on 8/23/21 at 8:29 am to mylsuhat
That looks damn good!
I like a lot of liver in my boudin. I save wild pork livers to use in it.
I like a lot of liver in my boudin. I save wild pork livers to use in it.
Posted on 8/23/21 at 8:37 am to Loup
As do I but just wasn’t sure how much to use. A few things online said 1lb chicken to 10lb pork so went that way.
Posted on 8/23/21 at 8:37 am to mylsuhat
That looks great! I have never made it with deer but have done several batches with wild hog. It’s the first thing to go. I normally use 5lbs meat to 1 lb liver. Recipe I base mine off of is Donald link’s and it’s damn good. Next time put some in tortillas and make burritos they are excellent for breakfast
Posted on 8/23/21 at 8:58 am to bayoudude
quote:Good to note
I normally use 5lbs meat to 1 lb liver
Posted on 8/23/21 at 9:06 am to mylsuhat
Awesome. You should cross post this on the Food board.
Posted on 8/23/21 at 9:11 am to mylsuhat
Very nice. I like a good bit of liver flavor. I use 4:1 ratio meat/liver with pork liver.
Posted on 8/23/21 at 9:22 am to mylsuhat
I almost downvoted....Because you didnt make enough for all of us
Seriously , that looks really damn good. Props to you for making that.
Seriously , that looks really damn good. Props to you for making that.
Posted on 8/23/21 at 9:29 am to Yukon7
Getting the liver correct seems to be the hardest part.
After making a few batches, it seems to take twice as much liver if you use chicken.
After making a few batches, it seems to take twice as much liver if you use chicken.
Posted on 8/23/21 at 10:00 am to mylsuhat
Thank you for the tutorial.
Boudin is hard to find up here and I've only had it a handful of times (and not sure what I had would be considered good boudin).
Boudin is hard to find up here and I've only had it a handful of times (and not sure what I had would be considered good boudin).
Posted on 8/23/21 at 11:01 am to mylsuhat
This makes me want to drive to Krotz Springs
Posted on 8/23/21 at 11:19 am to mylsuhat
A pot of boudin stuffing simmering on the stove has to be one of the best smells to come out of a kitchen.
Posted on 8/23/21 at 11:50 am to mylsuhat
Thanks for posting this! I just got a stuffer not long ago and have enjoyed trying some different things, ill have to put this one on the to-do list!
Question for you and others. Thoughts on adding curing salt (pink or celery) and then low temp smoking at 150 for a couple hours. I guess I'd worry about the rice becoming mush possibly
At any rate thanks for sharing!
Question for you and others. Thoughts on adding curing salt (pink or celery) and then low temp smoking at 150 for a couple hours. I guess I'd worry about the rice becoming mush possibly
At any rate thanks for sharing!
Posted on 8/23/21 at 12:40 pm to NOLAGT
OP, looks amazing brother. That recipe is pretty spot on how I do mine. The more often you make boudin, the better you will perfect your recipe.
IMO, Boudin does not need or require curing salt. Cut raw meat (Boston butt) up into 1"-2" cubes, season and refrigerate with vegetables, cook slow and low for several hours, drain meat from water, then mix meat with rice and seasoned water mixture. Once boudin is stuffed in the casing, then smoke to get that awesome flavor.
For raw boudin, I'd use natural casing. For smoked boudin use synthetic casing
pic of brisket boudin from Gonzo who is located in Luling

quote:
Thoughts on adding curing salt (pink or celery) and then low temp smoking at 150 for a couple hours
IMO, Boudin does not need or require curing salt. Cut raw meat (Boston butt) up into 1"-2" cubes, season and refrigerate with vegetables, cook slow and low for several hours, drain meat from water, then mix meat with rice and seasoned water mixture. Once boudin is stuffed in the casing, then smoke to get that awesome flavor.
For raw boudin, I'd use natural casing. For smoked boudin use synthetic casing
pic of brisket boudin from Gonzo who is located in Luling

Posted on 8/23/21 at 12:44 pm to Got Blaze
Derp moment...its all already cooked
Nothing to see here...move along 
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