Venison is quality protein; and hunters help get it onto the tables of deserving families when they donate deer to Hunters for the Hungry.
09—Once it’s [the deer] donated, the meat is used by food pantries, food banks, and other food assistance providers, which serve their local communities.
Anitra Hendricks oversees the program. Hunters may donate their legally tagged, field-dressed deer by bringing it to participating meat processors. Find a list of processors on the Hunters for the Hungry website.
24—Once they locate a processor, then basically it’s just a matter of harvesting the deer, making sure that they get it cleaned out. The processor will handle everything else. There is a reduced processing fee for those who donate to the program. They pay the fee, they do receive a receipt for a possible tax deduction. The meat processor will grind the meat, package it, and then from there it goes to the food assistance provider.
The Panhandle, far west Texas and the Rio Grande Valley have the fewest donations due to low processor participation. Without nearby participating processors, hunters don’t have an easy way to donate. Anitra is always on the lookout for more processors.
08— The have to be willing to keep some minimal book-keeping as far as tracking donations and reporting that to us at the end of the season.
The Wildlife and Sport Fish restoration program supports our series … For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.
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When handled correctly in the field and kitchen, venison can be tastier than domestically raised meat. The key is to keep it cool and dry immediately after harvest.
15—And then, the real poetry begins in the aging of that meat. If you can hang that meat for three to six days, some of the enzymes in the meat start to break it down, and you really get that tender, good tasting, concentrated flavor.
Lee Smith is a hunter and home cook from Austin, Texas. To store fresh venison, Smith recommends vacuum sealers, which keep meat usable for up to a year when frozen. And when you’re ready for it, Smith says – simple preparations are best.
23—You’re legally – depending upon what county you’re hunting in – able to take five deer in Texas. And that can be a lot of meat. So, I can understand after a while, how you might want to change it up and have a little horseradish sauce, or some kind of port reduction with some mushrooms. But, I want to taste the meat; I don’t want to throw a heavy sauce on it. In fact, tonight, we’re having venison fajitas.
Lee Smith says he usually marinates venison back strap briefly in olive oil and soy sauce, grills it, and ends up with something the whole family enjoys.
Lee Smith started hunting when he was 7 years old. Now in his mid-fifties, this Austin resident and home cook, says he hunts for meat not trophies.
06—Once you’ve pulled the trigger and you’ve got an animal down, the work really begins.
Field dressing, which involves removing the animal’s internal organs, can be a race against the clock—due to spoilage—says Smith.
24—Meat spoils due to three things: heat, moisture and dirt. Getting those internal organs out is going to immediately start to let that carcass cool. Second thing is: the skin. Taking that skin off is going to get that animal cooler, and also allow it to dry quicker. Once you’ve got it back [to camp], and taken the skin off, you rinse out the interior chest cavity, and get it into that cooler.
If you’re hunting on public land, or there isn’t a walk-in cooler at your lease, after field dressing and skinning the animal, quarter it.
13—That’s taking off the four quarters, the two backstraps, and the rear legs. That’s what you are legally bound to take. If you don’t take that, you can be ticketed for waste of game.
Put the quarters into tall kitchen garbage bags, and then into coolers with ice. How to handle game at home – that’s tomorrow.
For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.
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Maybe you’ve thought about preparing Thanksgiving dinner at a state park. Outdoor cooking enthusiast, and boater education coordinator, Tim Spice has some suggestions.
67— I would pick a part that has a picnic table, fire pit, it may have a grill; so all you have to do is bring your fuel. So all those things are there ready for you. Then the other thing I would do is pick your favorite menu items – simple to prepare. You don’t want to do anything fancy, because that take a lot of work. Remember – the reason we’re going outdoors is to enjoy the outdoors with friends and family. And then, I like to prepare before I leave the house. Do all your measurements for your meal – whatever it is, measure it out, put it in a zip lock bag, and then put it in a nice ice chest so you’ve got it prepared by meal. Then, when you show up, you’ve got it all measured. All you do is throw it in the pot, mix it together and start cooking. And so, what are some of the vessels you use to cook in and with? For me, I love Dutch ovens. Dutch ovens can do anything your oven can do and anything a stew pot can do. But, if you want to go with the family and plan a little hike in the afternoon, Dutch oven would be the great way to go, whether it be a turkey – and they do make Dutch ovens big enough for a turkey – or a whole chicken, you can put that all in a one pot meal. Put it on the fire; and as you’re doing your little hike you come back and it’s ready to go.
Thanks, Tim.
For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.
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When Texas Parks and Wildlife TV producer Abe Moore decided to shoot a segment on a wildlife artist for the PBS series, he didn’t have to look any further than Parks and Wildlife’s own Clemente Guzman.
58—He’s just so good at painting wildlife. It’s just a natural gift that he has.
When they see my painting, they see the hawk, or they see a raccoon; you know, I try to show it to you in a way that I saw it. I hope I can translate the energy that nature has. You know, that’s just life. Life at its best.
So, we call the story on Clemente and his amazing talent ‘The Inspired Artist.’ And for him, he makes sure he keeps his inspiration going by getting outside. And, he has a particular stream he visits to keep his inspiration going.
This little spot is very full of energy through the little pebbles, the noise of the water. And I get all kinds of ideas running through my head – I get a lot of inspiration – and I use that inspiration on my artwork.
So, we followed him from the beginning of a project to the culmination of the finale, and it’s just a great picture he did. So, you can see the story and the painting that he finished the last week in November on the TV show.
Thanks, Abe.
Check your local listings.
That’s our show for today…Funding provided in part by Ram Trucks. Guts. Glory. Ram
For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.
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