If Tim Maddams had taught me maths, I wouldn’t have dreaded afternoons of double maths and had to retake my…
If your gamebag includes a snipe, this is the classic way in which to eat it.
Would you like to appear on our site? We offer sponsored articles and advertising to put you in front of our readers. Find out more.Q: I have been told it is best to cook snipe with the guts inside. I suspect that some of the more experienced Guns on the shoot are having a joke — surely you cannot eat the guts and even if you can, they cannot be tasty?
I once got into trouble at catering college for being a bit flippant with the lecturer when I told him to “pull the other one” when we were discussing this subject. I was wrong.
Snipe are worm eaters. They use their long, thin bill to sift through the mud for invertebrates and mostly feed at night. They always empty their bowels upon taking flight, so the time lapsed since they last ate and the habit of excreting upon take-off mean that the intestinal tract will be all but empty.
The guts have a flavour like no other and will enrich the finished dish no end. I roast all small fowl in a hot pan on the hob until they are well coloured all over, using just a little salt and pepper and a little lard as a minimum. I often add fresh bay, garlic and thyme.
Once the birds are coloured, I will roast them on their backs in a fiercely hot oven for about five minutes, then allow them to rest in the warm pan for a few minutes. Then I will scrape the guts into the pan, add a dash of good-quality Pedro Ximénez sherry, chopped garlic and a little butter and cook the guts for a minute or two more in the pan while the birds rest on a plate nearby. The entire contents of the pan then go into a mini blender for a quick blitz. These internals are then re-seasoned and used to dress the rest of the meat from the birds, like a kind of warm pâté.
If Tim Maddams had taught me maths, I wouldn’t have dreaded afternoons of double maths and had to retake my…
Q: At this time of year I always end up with an abundance of game birds that I need to…
Ingredients
Method