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Administrator |
There is no easier way to cook a rabbit than this. We used to do this years ago in the desert. We would go out in the evening with a strong torch, and our 410 shotguns. We would shoot a few rabbits. The ones for next day are cleaned and prepared. Ones for breakfast are just buried under the sand by the fire. Skin and and all, nothing is done to them at all. They are left there all night. In the morning they are dug up. The skin just falls off by itself, the hair is still on, and the meat is well and truly cooked. | ||
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One of Us |
Gutted first, right? ![]() | |||
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one of us |
I can't look a roast rabbit in the face. We used to eat a lot of "rabbit pie" when I was 3 to about 6 years old. We had a lot of "pet" rabbits in a hutch out back. (I never made the connect.) When one of my favorites would disappear my dad would tell me, "the tarantulas carried it off". I believed him, but I'm beginning to wonder if maybe he made that story up. | |||
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Administrator |
No we do not gut it. The Bedouin’s eat the whole gut, with everything in it. | |||
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One of Us![]() |
In the early 70s I went on a backpack camping trip with as buddy + that night at the campfire he wrapped an apple in A/L foil + buried it in the coals for baked apple for breakfast. In the morning after getting the coffee going we pulled out the apple, still, the perfect shape, peeled off the foil to discover NOTHING there. Apples are mostly water BTW! As to the gut eating, I recall reading about the early American bison hunters that would fight over the guts + one would get on each end + start to swallow as much as they could working toward the middle + even recovering some from their opponent. Never mistake motion for action. | |||
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One of Us |
Not to be too far off topic, but as we have all experienced, African trackers and skinners take all of the guts for themselves, with the exception of the stomach contents. ![]() ![]() | |||
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One of Us |
If you are hungry enough, you will eat anything... ![]() | |||
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One of Us |
The aboriginals here used that cooking technique as well. Personally, I prefer to make rabbit stew and, if the rabbits are young and tender, simply pan fried with onions and garlic. | |||
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One of Us![]() |
I loved that Paul Newman movie "Hombre" + the scene where the missionaries wife is staked out to the hillside in the direct sun. After previously condemning those filthy Indians for eating dogs, then Paul says, "Ask her if she'd eat dog now." Never mistake motion for action. | |||
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