I get very excited when I create a recipe for young grouse and this one is no exception, using a cure and seasonal ingredients.
I’ve yet to shoot a grouse myself but I have seen a few drives in action. One day I’d love to walk-up grouse.
When you’re cooking grouse of different ages it’s important to know your young birds from your old. Otherwise will find yourself sitting at the dinner table, surrounded by polite, but clearly forced and non-committal murmurings of “It’s quite a strong flavour, isn’t it?” and possibly subtle comments.
If you are planning on roasting red grouse ask your gamedealer, butcher or loader to get you a few brace of young birds. Old grouse are delicious but require more hanging, while young reds are best eaten as fresh as possible. My recipe for young grouse is to always cook them slowly, with care, and with lots of other strong flavours. Old grouse make excellent pâté, divine stews and some of the best West Indian-style pasties I have ever eaten. I am also a fan of old grouse curry and old grouse noodle soup.
However, I will focus on young grouse here. If you are selecting birds in the feather, look for slightly smaller ones, with soft-ish claws that are a little transparent at the ends, and a tender rear to the skull that is easily compressed with the thumb. Remember that at the beginning of the season the proportion of properly young birds will be at its highest; as the season goes on, even the young birds get older, like the rest of us.
Once you have your young grouse, breast them the same way you would a pigeon. This dish works just as well with pigeon,and even teal, but grouse is hard to beat. Some people say it is a shame not to roast the birds whole, but the light cure added to the meat prevents that here, and you can still roast the carcases to make a stock or broth.
Young grouse breasts, chanterelles and blackberries
Sprinkle the cure evenly over the grouse breasts
Choose yellow chanterelle mushrooms rather than the brown winter variety
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