To begin with, you should have a few essentials with you on your hunting trips. A medium-sized, sharp knife is really all that is needed for most of this work. A pair of shears and garden clippers are also helpful. A $12 garden clipper will cut through bird bones as well as anything. Surgical gloves will keep your hands clean; good to keep a box on hand. A cooler with ice in the truck will help get birds back to camp in the best shape. Zip lock bags and paper towels rounds out the kit. Now it's time to take care of the birds.
Method #1: Skinning
As the name implies, this method involves removing both the skin and the feathers, which peel away at the same time. There are a couple of ways to do this; both are fast and easy.
Skinning works best if you have a mess of birds to do at once. It's also the method to use when the bird isn't shot up too badly, but there's no time for plucking. Make a small cut with a knife or shears where the neck meets the body, remove the crop and then peel back skin and feathers, ending at the end of the bird. The skin and feathers will come off in clumps. Flip the bird over and do the same on the back and then finally peel the thighs and legs. With the skin gone, what little fat is on most birds is also now gone, so adding fat to the recipe is key. Almost any cooking method is fine for a skinned bird with the notable exception of whole bird, skin-on roasting. So, consider braising, poaching, pâté, soups and stews.
Skinning is the best, fastest method for field dressing birds on the road. Make sure to keep either a wing or leg attached to show the game warden you have legal birds where needed. In the hot, early season, it's best to remove entrails immediately to keep the birds from spoiling. Wrap each bird in a paper towel, pop it in a zip lock bag and then into the cooler. They are ready for the trip home.
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THE BIG HURTS
my Uncle Pat once told me that both pain and disappointment were good:âThe more of those you have experienced,â he explained, âthe longer you have lived; suffer but a little, and youâre in an early grave.
Day's End
NEAR MISSES
Hunting Dog Hypoglycemia
The first time I ever saw a dog have a seizure from hunting dog hypoglycemia was 25 years ago while hunting pheasants in western Kansas.
Profile of an Artist: MATT DOYLE
Throughout Matt's life, there has always been an active passion for the great outdoors. As a young Pennsylvanian boy, his dad and grandfathers would take him out fishing and later hunting to share their deep-rooted respect and enjoyment for God's country. It became very clear that their passion for the outdoors would soon develop his passion for it as well.
DESERT CATHARSIS
Miles of sagebrush and grasslands slipped past during the 10-hour drive between Bozeman and Denver.
RED CAR WHITE DOG:
A Riff on Sporting Vehicles and Other Matters
UENATOR CAUE (HUNTER BEWARE) A FIELD GUIDE +O HUNTING LODGES
From ice bars to plywood shacks, in-room hot tubs to a kitchen staff uprising, the hunting lodge experience can be fascinating and frustrating.
Charles Helles & Sons, London
âSome enchanted evening ... you may see a stranger across a crowdedâ â gunroom.
ON POINT: Finding My Way with the Help of an English Setter
Becky came into my life in a rather unusual way. My friend Tom McGuane had just bought a home on Mobile Bay as a place to retreat from the cold winters of his Montana ranch.
Tail feathers - STANDARDS AND PRACTICES
\"An armed society is a polite society,\" the NRA says in one of its dicta, cribbed from Robert A. Heinlein, a 20th-century American science fiction writer.