I sent a text to my wife, “Let’s drop everything this weekend, throw the air mattress in the back of the Jeep, and cruise up the Eastern side of the Sierras for an epic adventure.” She responded, “Sure.” (We also had our two-year-old, Zoe Kathryn, to take with us.)
Four hours from home, we found ourselves pulling into the quaint town of Lone Pine, which sits at the base of the Eastern Sierras. The landscape around the town, including the famed Alabama Hills, has been the backdrop for many movies, mostly Westerns, dating back to the 1930s.
Our campsite was really nothing but high desert scattered with cactus, brush, and rocks. Perfect for rabbits. We parked in an unoccupied area, and I grabbed my shotgun and set off on foot. I was no more than 100 yards past a nearby creek bed when I jumped up the jackrabbit. He held tight, hidden behind a bush until the last instant. I could have reached out and grabbed him. Boom… he took off running from behind the bush. I raised my shotgun and fired but missed…forgot to lead. I tracked the rabbit with my gun, chambered another round, and let it rip. The rabbit rolled forward in his tracks and ceased to move.
I walked over to the rabbit and said a quiet thanks for his sacrifice. This meat would feed my family and I was always taught to show appreciation and respect to the animal. While walking to the Jeep, I began to think about the meal I would prepare.
Long ago I was studying the memoir of Marco Pierre White, who was one of the original famed chefs…long before Emeril or Bobby Flay. Marco Pierre White always said to pair wild animals with a food that they eat. This will help blend the natural flavors from within the meat. This concept is something I have always tried to follow as I develop recipes, and it has never let me down.
As I walked in the desert, I scanned my immediate vicinity to see what this rabbit would have normally eaten. I know that in drought, similar to the one we are in, rabbits will often eat the base of the nopales cactus to obtain both nutrients and moisture. I noticed that there were several reddish purple fruits attached to the nopales cactus pads. These delicious fruits are most commonly called prickly pears and they have some amazing culinary uses. One such use is in a sauce to coat roasted rabbit legs.
[Post edited for length.]
Blog: Harvesting Nature
Post Title: Roasted Rabbit Legs with a Spicy Prickly Pear Sauce
Post Date: December 10, 2014
Author: Justin Townsend | From: Oceanside | Blogging since: 2011
I sent a text to my wife, “Let’s drop everything this weekend, throw the air mattress in the back of the Jeep, and cruise up the Eastern side of the Sierras for an epic adventure.” She responded, “Sure.” (We also had our two-year-old, Zoe Kathryn, to take with us.)
Four hours from home, we found ourselves pulling into the quaint town of Lone Pine, which sits at the base of the Eastern Sierras. The landscape around the town, including the famed Alabama Hills, has been the backdrop for many movies, mostly Westerns, dating back to the 1930s.
Our campsite was really nothing but high desert scattered with cactus, brush, and rocks. Perfect for rabbits. We parked in an unoccupied area, and I grabbed my shotgun and set off on foot. I was no more than 100 yards past a nearby creek bed when I jumped up the jackrabbit. He held tight, hidden behind a bush until the last instant. I could have reached out and grabbed him. Boom… he took off running from behind the bush. I raised my shotgun and fired but missed…forgot to lead. I tracked the rabbit with my gun, chambered another round, and let it rip. The rabbit rolled forward in his tracks and ceased to move.
I walked over to the rabbit and said a quiet thanks for his sacrifice. This meat would feed my family and I was always taught to show appreciation and respect to the animal. While walking to the Jeep, I began to think about the meal I would prepare.
Long ago I was studying the memoir of Marco Pierre White, who was one of the original famed chefs…long before Emeril or Bobby Flay. Marco Pierre White always said to pair wild animals with a food that they eat. This will help blend the natural flavors from within the meat. This concept is something I have always tried to follow as I develop recipes, and it has never let me down.
As I walked in the desert, I scanned my immediate vicinity to see what this rabbit would have normally eaten. I know that in drought, similar to the one we are in, rabbits will often eat the base of the nopales cactus to obtain both nutrients and moisture. I noticed that there were several reddish purple fruits attached to the nopales cactus pads. These delicious fruits are most commonly called prickly pears and they have some amazing culinary uses. One such use is in a sauce to coat roasted rabbit legs.
[Post edited for length.]
Blog: Harvesting Nature
Post Title: Roasted Rabbit Legs with a Spicy Prickly Pear Sauce
Post Date: December 10, 2014
Author: Justin Townsend | From: Oceanside | Blogging since: 2011
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