Recipes for game meat and fish

Tag: stir fry

Pheasant breast stir-fry

Pheasant stir-fry inspired by the salty-sweet-sour balance of Thai cuisine.

Pheasant hunting has always fascinated me—likely a result of reading Roald Dahl’s Danny the Champion of the World as a young boy—but having spent most of my adult life in northern Australia it had not been something I’d had the opportunity to pursue. At least not until February 2023, when a fortunate series of events saw me in the United States and invited to participate in a unique pheasant hunt in Maryland. The outfitter, who I had met through gun dog circles, had space for an additional shooter at an event designed to replicate a European style driven pheasant shoot, and while this was a far cry from my long held desire to hunt the wild birds of King Island it was quite simply an opportunity too good to pass up.

The ringneck pheasant, with a native range from Asia to the Balkans, has been widely introduced across North America, Europe and Australia.

That is how I found myself atop a hill on the Maryland-Pennsylvania border, Beretta in hand and dog by my side one Saturday morning in February. To say the morning was crisp is a gross understatement—around ten o’clock the shooters were liberally dusted in snow. The conditions didn’t bother the dogs, the locals, or the birds and I pretended may hands and feet weren’t biting cold to the bone. 

Over the course of the morning the shooters rotated around each ‘peg’, while the outfitter released pheasant in either singles or pairs. At the end of the day the shot birds were divided equally amongst the guns, and the missed birds were left to chance their luck in the woods.  

Most of the birds were ‘breasted out’ by the outfitter’s crew while we were still in the field. As a result I left the hunting clubhouse that afternoon with several kilos of skin free breast meat, and not the number of whole birds I had expected. On one hand this greatly reduced the amount of labour required of me, but on the other it impacted my culinary ambitions. So it was with a relative abundance of pheasant breast meat and a serious hankering for quality Asian flavours—which should naturally suit ring-necked pheasant—I hit on the idea of a Thai-style pheasant stir-fry.

Much later in the year I returned for a morning of upland hunting. This I found to be much more challenging and rewarding.

Pheasant breast stir-fry

Thai inspired pheasant breast stir-fry
Prep Time20 minutes
Cook Time10 minutes
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Contemporary Australian, Thai
Keyword: pheasant
Servings: 4 people

Ingredients

  • 4 pheasant breasts skinless
  • 1/3 cup cornflour
  • 1 brown onion
  • 1 red capsicum
  • 3 cloves garlic
  • 4 shallots (spring onions)
  • 1/4 cup cashews optional
  • 1/4 cup peanut oil

Marinade

  • 1 egg white
  • 1 tbsp soy sauce
  • 1 splash lime juice

Sauce

  • 4 tbsp oyster sauce
  • 2 tbsp soy sauce
  • 2 tbsp tomato sauce (ketchup)
  • 3 tbsp lime juice
  • 1 tbsp Mirin
  • 1 tbsp Palm sugar (crushed) can substitute with brown sugar
  • 1 tbsp ginger paste
  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil optional

Instructions

  • Assuming you will serve this with rice, it would be best to start by preparing the rice.
  • Slice the pheasant breasts into bite size portions, discarding any badly blood-shot pieces.
  • Whisk together the marinade ingredients in a large bowl, and add the pheasant meat to the marinade.
    Strictly speaking we aren’t really marinating the meat, but instead employing a Chinese stir-fry technique called ‘velveting’ to produce meat that is both crisp on the outside and tender inside. Let the meat rest in the marinade while you prepare the vegetables and sauce.
  • Slice the onion, capsicum, garlic and shallots.
  • Combine all of the sauce ingredients and mix well.
  • Over a medium-high heat, heat 2-3cm of oil in the bottom of a wok.
  • While the oil heats, add 1/3 cup of corn flour to a plate or bowl and toss the meat through the cornflour until it is evenly coated.
  • Once the oil has reached around 175-180C, cook the meat in small batches without overcrowding the wok. If you don’t have a suitable thermometer, you can test the oil by adding a small piece of the meat, if the oil immediately bubbles it is hot enough.
  • Once all of the meat is cooked carefully drain most of the hot oil, leaving about 1 tablespoon of oil in the bottom of the wok.
  • Add the onion to the hot wok and continually stir for sixty seconds, then add the capsicum garlic and ¾ of the shallots. Continue to stir fry until the vegetables are cooked but still retain some crunch. Add the cashews (if using them).
  • Add all of the sauce and heat through. Once the sauce is heated return the meat to the wok, and toss or stir everything together until it is evenly coated. Remove from the heat and serve on a bed of rice. Garnish with the remaining shallots. 

Crispy magpie goose stir fry in sticky sauce

silhouette of a man at sunrise
Waiting for ‘shooting light’, Harrison Dam NT

Magpie goose, either fresh from the field or out of the freezer, was consumed almost weekly while my family enjoyed living in the Top End.

Admittedly my first attempts at cooking with magpie goose were more miss than hit, and the meals received pretty dim reviews. Things took a turn for the better when I started treating the meat more like beef or lamb and less like poultry.

This particular dish, inspired by the smells and flavours of the many Asian food stalls at Mindil Beach Markets, became a firm family favourite. This recipe should yield sufficient quantity to serve 4-6 people, especially if served with rice or noodles and some Asian greens, but it’s honestly that good that there are rarely any leftovers when served to only four.

I can normally have this on the table in less than 40 minutes, but I suggest taking your time and allocating at least an hour so that you’re not too rushed.

Halve each breast lengthways and slice into evenly sized strips

Crispy Magpie Goose Stir Fry in Sticky Sauce

Asian food stall inspired crispy stir fried magpie goose
Prep Time30 minutes
Cook Time20 minutes
Total Time50 minutes
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Chinese
Keyword: asian, asian magpie goose, chinese goose recipe, goose, magpie goose, magpie goose stirfry
Servings: 4 hungry people

Equipment

  • wok

Ingredients

  • 4 magpie goose breasts
  • ½ cup corn flour
  • garlic salt or steak spice
  • 1 onion
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • ½ thumb sized piece of ginger
  • 4 spring onions
  • 1 red chilli optional
  • 1 tbsp sesame seeds
  • 1-1½ cups canola oil or any neutral oil with a high smoke point
  • 1 tbsp peanut oil

Sauce

  • ½ cup hoi sin sauce
  • ¼ cup light soy sauce
  • ¼ cup honey
  • ¼ cup oyster sauce
  • 2 tbsp water
  • 2 tbsp Chinese cooking wine rice wine
  • 1 tbsp rice wine vinegar or white vinegar
  • ½ tbsp chicken stock power
  • 1 piece palm sugar (crushed)
  • 2 tbsp corn flour for a slurry to thicken sauce
  • 2 tbsp water for a slurry to thicken sauce

Instructions

  • To get strips of meat that are genuinely crispy on the outside and tender in the middle you will need to deep fry the meat and then stir fry the rest of the ingredients prior to combining everything with the sauce. This is best done in a steel wok over high heat.
  • Start by preparing the strips of goose meat. I run a sharp filleting knife horizontally along the length of each breast, to create two fillets of half the original thickness. Then slice each fillet into strips around half a centimetre wide.
    slicing magpie goose breasts for stir frying
  • Once you have cut all of the breast meat, spread it evenly across the cutting board and season liberally with either garlic salt or steak spice.
  • Place the meat in a bowel and toss through half a cup of corn flour, coating each piece of meat evenly. You can leave the meat in the bowl, however I like to lay the meat out in a single layer to prevent it sticking together.
  • Slice the onion, capsicum, garlic, ginger, chilli and spring onions and set aside. 
    sliced spring onion, capsicum, onion and chilli
  • With that done, place the sesame seeds in the wok over a low-medium heat and gently toast them.
  • While the sesame seeds are toasting you can prepare the sauce by combining all of the ingredients (except the corn flour and additional water) into a small bowl.
  • In separate bowl make a slurry from two tablespoons of corn flour and the same amount of water and set that aside too. Keep an eye on the sesame seeds while you do this and make sure to remove them from the wok as soon as they start to lightly brown.
  • Now all of the ingredients should be prepared and within easy reach of your wok. Meaning that you can get the cooking done as quickly as possible and serve the dish while it is still hot and crispy.
  • Add 1 to 1 ½ cups of oil to the wok and heat over a high heat. Once the oil starts to shimmer add a piece of meat, if it bubbles immediately the oil is hot enough to start cooking. Fry the meat in batches of ten or so pieces, but don’t crowd the wok. Fry to golden brown and set aside on a plate lined with paper towel.
  • Once all of the meat is cooked carefully discard the oil. Add a tablespoon of peanut oil to the wok and toss the onion and capsicum constantly for a minute, then add the garlic ginger and spring onion, being careful to not let the garlic stick and burn. You should be aiming for onion and capsicum that is cooked but still retains a firm texture. Once the vegetables are cooked sufficiently remove them from the wok.
  • Add the sauce to the wok and stir it around to ensure all of the palm sugar is dissolved, as soon as the sauce starts to bubble add in the corn flour slurry. Boil for just a moment until the sauce begins to thicken and then turn off the heat.
  • Return the vegetables and the meat, toss well to combine. Serve immediately in to individual bowls, or a large share plate, garnish with sesame seeds, chilli and additional (raw) spring onion.
Serve on a pre-heated plate and garnish with sesame seeds, sliced chilli and additional spring onion

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