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Favorite Recipes from Africa ...
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I collect recipes from hunting trips and have a few good ones from my South African safaris, including pumpkin fritters, country fried wildebeest and a nameless pasta cheese/ham casserole.

What's your favorite African fare? ... and please feel free to share any recipes!


"If you hunt to eat, or hunt for sport for something fine, something that will make you proud, and make you remember every single detail of the day you found him and shot him, that is good too." – Robert Chester Ruark
 
Posts: 90 | Registered: 03 June 2005Reply With Quote
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African food was fantastic on my trip last year. I dont have the recipe, but a warm pumkin cake was delicious.

The best game I had was t-bone gemsbok steaks. Better than almost any beef I have ever had.


Si Vis Pacem, Para Bellum
 
Posts: 2597 | Location: Western New York | Registered: 30 December 2003Reply With Quote
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Erik D.'s Boerewors

This is a recipe based on one we got from some friends in Namibia:

9 kg game meat (or other lean meat)
1.5 kg mutton
800 gram smoked bacon (without the rind)
2 kg sheep fat (or pork fat if sheep fat is hard to find) It is easiest to cut if semi-frozen.
4 cups oatmeal
7 tablespoon salt
2 teaspoons smoked salt
7 tablespoons whole corrianderseeds (brown in pan, and then grind and sift to get rid of the husks.)
6 tablespoons bbq spice
2 tablespoons garlic powder
2 tablespoons black pepper (finely grinded)
1 tablespoon thyme
2 tablespoon mustard seeds
2 teaspoons nutmeg (finely grinded)
2 teaspoons cloves (finely grinded)
250 ml worschester sauce
170 ml apple cider vinegar
40 meters pig casings

* 20 meters sheep casings (for making droerewors out of some of the batch). If you only want to make boerewors, it’s often best to stick to pigcasings as these are a bit bigger, and are easier to work with. Sheep casings do work for boerewors, but make sure you don’t stuff them too much or they will split when cooking!

Cut all the meat and fat into small (1 square inch) pieces. Mix all the spices, both wet and dry together in a bowl. Spread the diced meat, fat and oatmeal onto a table (or in a big tub.) and pour the spice mix evenly over the meat. Mix gently together with your hands to spread all the spice “juiceâ€.

Grind the meatmix in a course (about 7mm) mincer. Mince only once. It's supposed to be course. Let the grinded meatmix sit 24 hours in a fridge or other cool place. A half hour before stuffing, soak the casings in lukewarm water, and then rinse in cold running water.

Start stuffing! Don’t stuff to hard or they’ll split open during cooking. We have found it easiest to make a longish, spiral ring instead of single, separate sausages. We make the spiral long enough to feed 2 people.

After stuffing, preferably vacuum pack and then keep the boerewors in a refrigerator a couple of days before finally freezing to let the meat bind, and flavour penetrate the meat.

Enjoy!

Ps. If making droerwors, make a single oval ring, tying off the sausage at each end. Tie another knot to connect each loose end so you can hang it over a broomstick (or whatever you might use to hang and dry things). Submerge in boiling water mixed with vinegar (5 dl vinegar to 3 liters water) for 2 seconds. Hang in a cool place (about 5-10 degrees celcius) with a good breeze (or use a fan). After 1 day take down the sausages, and flatten them gentley with a rolling pin to get out any trapped air. hang up again and let hang for about 2 weeks. Or until dry, it depends on the temperature. If any mold appears, throw it away!
 
Posts: 2662 | Location: Oslo, in the naive land of socialist nepotism and corruption... | Registered: 10 May 2002Reply With Quote
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Originally posted by ErikD:
Erik D.'s Boerewors

...If any mold appears, throw it away!


Well, this would prelude me from using the recipe in Houston.


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Posts: 5052 | Location: Muletown | Registered: 07 September 2001Reply With Quote
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Forrest,

Any meat that is going to be dried should be followed closely. The boerwors is easier of course, since it goes right in the fridge and then freezer.

I've used a tall cabinet with a fan and a lightbulb at the bottom to dry biltong, droerwors etc when it's humid outside. With an insectproof vent at the top. The lightbulb dries out the air, and the fan cirulates it. Something simular might work for you in "Moldy Houston"!
 
Posts: 2662 | Location: Oslo, in the naive land of socialist nepotism and corruption... | Registered: 10 May 2002Reply With Quote
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