Entry tags:
broadening my culinary horizons
Tonight the butcher had a sign advertising fresh bison. From a species point of view bison is kosher, but you rarely find it at all, let alone slaughtered according to the laws of kashrut. I've never tasted bison, so I was curious.
I decided to have the bison and some beef concurrently, to more directly compare the tastes. Also, the bison was $14 per pound, I didn't even know if we would like it, and I wanted to hedge. So I bought one bison steak and some beef steak of comparable thickness (so I could cook them together), and we each had half of each.
Verdict: tastes like ch--... no, actually, it's similar to beef, but we both found it to be more tender and more flavorful. It did not have that gamey taste that I vaguely remember venison having back when I ate that. I would definitely enjoy eating this again, though I will shell out $14 per pound only very infrequently. Judging from availability trends, though, that's not a problem. :-)
I don't know how much of the tenderness was due to its bison-ness and how much to the cut. (It was a shoulder steak, for what that's worth. Doesn't mean anything to me.)
I decided to have the bison and some beef concurrently, to more directly compare the tastes. Also, the bison was $14 per pound, I didn't even know if we would like it, and I wanted to hedge. So I bought one bison steak and some beef steak of comparable thickness (so I could cook them together), and we each had half of each.
Verdict: tastes like ch--... no, actually, it's similar to beef, but we both found it to be more tender and more flavorful. It did not have that gamey taste that I vaguely remember venison having back when I ate that. I would definitely enjoy eating this again, though I will shell out $14 per pound only very infrequently. Judging from availability trends, though, that's not a problem. :-)
I don't know how much of the tenderness was due to its bison-ness and how much to the cut. (It was a shoulder steak, for what that's worth. Doesn't mean anything to me.)

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It was good, but not worth the $20/lb that we paid. :-)
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I've found that the best way to deal with the price of non-kosher meat is just not to look at the prices. I can't see how kosher meat could ever be less expensive than the cheapest non-kosher meat (unless a kosher market were using the meat as a loss-leader, which would be unlikely), so just don't look.
Of course, that still doesn't help with the absolute price of Kosher meat...
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This is why I eat a LOT more chicken thighs since keeping a Kosher home (they occasionally go on sale for as little as $.79/lb, though they're currently $1.09...) than I used to do.
Also, we have a friend who's a caterer and she sometimes lets us place our meat orders with her to get the bulk pricing (which is still expensive) :-)
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I was pleasantly surprised, when I entered the data into my nutrition-tracking program, that bison has about half the calories of a like quantity of beef.
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Yep. The problem with cage traps and kosher animals is that most of the non-bird species are basically large herd beasts. How do you trap a bison/deer/goat in a cage? The animal can't be injured before slaughter, so some sort of pit trap wouldn't work.
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Bison
Re: Bison
Part of the reason I got both bison and steak is that I don't cook a lot of steak, don't have the technique really down, and wanted to eliminate the "possibly-badly-cooked" variable. So I got two pieces of meat of the same thickness and cooked them in the same pan. It's possible that I'm too much of a geek. :-)