The Accurate Reloading Forums
Best tasting African game
05 September 2007, 04:37
retreeverBest tasting African game
I loved kongoni filets, but my 16 foot croc smelled so bad even the maggots were
gagging...
Mike
Michael Podwika... DRSS bigbores and hunting
www.pvt.co.za " MAKE THE SHOT " 450#2 Famars
05 September 2007, 06:57
sevenmagltd.I shot a leopard back in 1994 and my ph traded a ham for a tank of gas for his cruiser. He said the blacks believed it great for putting lead in your pencil. Wasn't interested in trying the meat and didn't need the lead at the time. Gotta admit, I'm more game for trying the meat next time I take a big tom, the lead also would be a welcome treat!
05 September 2007, 11:05
Kyler HamannEland is really good and it's been said many times it may be the best. But I really enjoyed gemsbuck and Mtn. zebra steaks.
I'm glad I tried elephant but I noticed I was the only one at the table eating it.
Kyler
05 September 2007, 11:08
yukon deltaI really liked the elephant backstrap I tried but maybe it's because I shot it and worked hard for it. Which part did you eat Kyler and how was it cooked?
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11 September 2007, 03:57
Use Enough GunAs of the last trip it was finely ground and breaded Cape Buffalo burgers. Literally melted in your mouth!!!
18 September 2007, 09:00
hacksawtomFor me it's a tie between bush pig and eland.
Swift, Silent, & Friendly
18 September 2007, 16:51
Die Ou Jagtersevenmagltd, you will love your Leopard backstrap. I got my tom in April and the cook did it like snitzel or chicken fried steak take your choice of terms. We also had Zebra prepared the same way and served with a wedge of lemon and it was the best Zebra I had ever had. come to think of it the cook liked to fry most every thing, what isn't good fried.

25 September 2007, 00:40
Andrew McLarenquote:
Originally posted by kayaker:
Most game I have found to be good. The only really gamey meat I have had was from a Nyala - but it was gut-shot and ran a while- could have had an effect.
kayaker has it exactly right here. Meat from a wounded, and particularly a gutshot, animal is just good for donation to mother-in-laws!
Except for old giraffe bulls, and maybe some others that I do not know [?], any game that was relaxed and unsuspecting before getting a DRT [Dead Right There or "BangFlop"] shot has great tasting potential. Taking overly long to remove sotmach and bleeding it, like long photographic sessions, or delayed cooling of the carcass can spoil or deminish the taste potential.
Another very important factor is a long walk in search and stalk closer hunt. After all it is said: "Hunger is the best cook!"
My vote goes for a springbuck female shot through the head while actually fast asleep! Best, by very far, fillets I've ever had!
In good hunting.
27 September 2007, 05:06
gas57Tenderloin of fresh kudu on the BBQ, followed by wildebeast tenderloin, and next was guinea fowl. They were all very, very tasty!
When catapults are outlawed, only outlaws will have catapults!
27 September 2007, 19:26
Tim CarneyTry a Pofadder -- not the snake to be sure, although that may be edible. The true Pofadder dish is the last meter of an antelope's large intestine (gemsbok is best IMO). CLEAN it out and stuff with the heart, liver and kidneys of the beast along with some sheep fat. Cook slowly for two hours or so over hardwood (mopane) coals. Slice and serve as an appetizer followed by gemsbok steaks. (Chloresterol consumed more than 5,000 miles from home does not count...)
Regards
28 September 2007, 00:28
Tim CarneyKnew a Pofadder picture was in the camera:
Regards
28 September 2007, 01:28
yukon deltaBody filters and intestinal parts need not apply here.

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09 October 2007, 02:31
Bryan ChickI enjoyed the liver from our elephant we shot in April-a bit grainer than beef liver but pretty danged good
09 October 2007, 21:23
mstarlingLots of great meats ... but the best to my taste buds was Eland, Gemsbock and Zebra.
Hit the buf on the last day and never got to taste any of him. He was given to a local high school for a traditional graduation ceremony. Glad that he didn't go to waste, but would sure like to have had a taste.
Mike
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DRSS, Womper's Club, NRA Life Member/Charter Member NRA Golden Eagles ...
Knifemaker,
http://www.mstarling.com 19 October 2007, 13:12
wombatIn order of preference
eland
warthog leg
impala stew
zebra roast
Forget bloody camel!!
Australia
I love a sunburnt country,
A land of sweeping plains,
Of ragged mountain ranges,
Of drought and flooding rains.
I love her far horizons,
I love her jewel-sea,
Her beauty and her terror
The wide brown land for me!
19 October 2007, 18:01
BaldMummyOk as a South African Lad .. here is my list
SpringBok Fillet/ and Kudu a close second or maybe Bush Buck
Then Wildebees and Eland.
I just like things that go BANG!!!
19 October 2007, 18:03
BaldMummyOk ... actually .. pretty much anything cooked in the bush ... that was hunted on a trip with good mates.
and a cold beer.
Food just tastes better grilled over a hardwood fire in the African Bush.
I just like things that go BANG!!!
09 November 2007, 21:58
WinkKudu liver is also very tasty.
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AR, where the hopeless, hysterical hypochondriacs of history become the nattering nabobs of negativisim.
09 November 2007, 23:02
RhysHad Kudu, Gemsbok, Smoked Ele (was from an old bull), and Hartmans Zebra. The only one I didn't much care for was the Elephant. Favorite though had to be the Gemsbok. The Zebra Schnitzel was mighty fine though.
Yes it's cocked, and it has bullets too!!!
09 November 2007, 23:03
Bwana BundukiEland Filet...
No organs here.
Jeff
10 November 2007, 02:32
tom`Talia from Universiteit van die Vrystaat.
Otherwise, Imapala and Kudu, especially Impala liver and onions.
10 November 2007, 12:45
jetdrvrForgot to mention hommade kudu cottage pie, compliments of Ananja Bamberger of Warthog Safaris...
11 November 2007, 11:47
SnowwolfeWarthog! Damn that meat is good. Like sweet fine grained pork
My biggest fear is when I die my wife will sell my guns for what I told her they cost.
11 November 2007, 15:19
duggaboybuffEland , followed by bushbuck, then Kudu biltong!
12 November 2007, 00:19
doccashI havn't tasted eland, and it must be good, but reedbuck fillet cooked over the fire on a shis-k-bob to your liking and a cold Kilamanjro beer is world class fare Dr.C

At Home on the Range-Texas Panhandle
13 November 2007, 05:22
PalmerAnother nomination for Lichtenstein's Hartebeest or Kongoni....especially the cold left overs about 9 or 10 in the morning.
Dig a little out of the cooler and douse liberally with Tabasco sauce, no bread just pop it in. Even if you do not get on the buff that day it is all right.
ALLEN W. JOHNSON - DRSS
Into my heart on air that kills
From yon far country blows:
What are those blue remembered hills,
What spires, what farms are those?
That is the land of lost content,
I see it shining plain,
The happy highways where I went
And cannot come again.
A. E. Housman
13 November 2007, 19:52
PSmithEland, kudu, wart hog, impala. Awesome!
The mopane worms were okay I guess.
Paul Smith
SCI Life Member
NRA Life Member
DSC Member
Life Member of the "I Can't Wait to Get Back to Africa" Club
DRSS
I had the privilege to fire E. Hemingway's WR .577NE, E. Keith's WR .470NE, & F. Jamieson's WJJ .500 Jeffery
I strongly recommend avoidance of "The Zambezi Safari & Travel Co., Ltd." and "Pisces Sportfishing-Cabo San Lucas"
"A failed policy of national defense is its own punishment" Otto von Bismarck
24 November 2007, 07:53
billrquimbyMy first five choices:
Eland.
Eland.
Eland.
Eland.
Springbok.
I ate a backstrap fillet from my lion, and it tasted exactly like the mountain lions and bobcats I've eaten here in Arizona. It's OK, but I wouldn't stand in a long line for it.
Bill Quimby