Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Wow, the ignorant comments about goose are beyond the pale. Are these all Americans who know nothing but shrinked-wrapped chicken, turkey, pork and beef from chain supermarkets?
Plenty of people eat goose, duck, pheasant, cornish hen, capon, partridge, pigeon... not to mention boar, venison, fox, rabbit and various other meats.
I'm French and I think the best poultry to serve is capon: it's easy and keeps its moisture well. But I've had all the birds I listed above. I remember a breast of wild pigeon I was served in a rural part of France, and it was DELICIOUS. It wasn't a sky rat like you see in NYC or Paris, it was a healthy, well-fed bird, akin to red meat, great for winter with a rich gravy and hearty red wine.
Come on. Get out of your food rut.
Mais non, je ne comprends pas…qu’est que ce…what ees thees “flex” of which you speak?
Acting baffled that Americans buy meat and poultry at the grocery store is not the flex you think it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In How to Cook Everything, Mark Bittman suggests:
Wild greens salad
Roast Goose
Bread stuffing with mushrooms
Pureed turnips
Baked pumpkin slices
Roasted chestnuts
Lemon, orange, or grand marnier souffle
Egg nog
Thanks! We're going to go with:
Gougeres
Silver Palate Cookbook's scalloped oysters
Wild rice and chestnut stuffing
Butternut squash soup
Roasted potayes and parsnips
Garlic green beans
Chocolate souffle
Egg nog
Anonymous wrote:In How to Cook Everything, Mark Bittman suggests:
Wild greens salad
Roast Goose
Bread stuffing with mushrooms
Pureed turnips
Baked pumpkin slices
Roasted chestnuts
Lemon, orange, or grand marnier souffle
Egg nog
Anonymous wrote:The Joy of Cooking suggests the following for "formal" Christmas dinner:
Goose stuffed with sweet potatoes and apple
Turnip cups filled with peas
Corn zephyrs (a kind of corn puff/muffin)
Cherry pie
But you might substitute fig pudding for the cherry pie.
Anonymous wrote:
Wow, the ignorant comments about goose are beyond the pale. Are these all Americans who know nothing but shrinked-wrapped chicken, turkey, pork and beef from chain supermarkets?
Plenty of people eat goose, duck, pheasant, cornish hen, capon, partridge, pigeon... not to mention boar, venison, fox, rabbit and various other meats.
I'm French and I think the best poultry to serve is capon: it's easy and keeps its moisture well. But I've had all the birds I listed above. I remember a breast of wild pigeon I was served in a rural part of France, and it was DELICIOUS. It wasn't a sky rat like you see in NYC or Paris, it was a healthy, well-fed bird, akin to red meat, great for winter with a rich gravy and hearty red wine.
Come on. Get out of your food rut.
Anonymous wrote:
Wow, the ignorant comments about goose are beyond the pale. Are these all Americans who know nothing but shrinked-wrapped chicken, turkey, pork and beef from chain supermarkets?
Plenty of people eat goose, duck, pheasant, cornish hen, capon, partridge, pigeon... not to mention boar, venison, fox, rabbit and various other meats.
I'm French and I think the best poultry to serve is capon: it's easy and keeps its moisture well. But I've had all the birds I listed above. I remember a breast of wild pigeon I was served in a rural part of France, and it was DELICIOUS. It wasn't a sky rat like you see in NYC or Paris, it was a healthy, well-fed bird, akin to red meat, great for winter with a rich gravy and hearty red wine.
Come on. Get out of your food rut.
Anonymous wrote:In How to Cook Everything, Mark Bittman suggests:
Wild greens salad
Roast Goose
Bread stuffing with mushrooms
Pureed turnips
Baked pumpkin slices
Roasted chestnuts
Lemon, orange, or grand marnier souffle
Egg nog
Anonymous wrote:
Wow, the ignorant comments about goose are beyond the pale. Are these all Americans who know nothing but shrinked-wrapped chicken, turkey, pork and beef from chain supermarkets?
Plenty of people eat goose, duck, pheasant, cornish hen, capon, partridge, pigeon... not to mention boar, venison, fox, rabbit and various other meats.
I'm French and I think the best poultry to serve is capon: it's easy and keeps its moisture well. But I've had all the birds I listed above. I remember a breast of wild pigeon I was served in a rural part of France, and it was DELICIOUS. It wasn't a sky rat like you see in NYC or Paris, it was a healthy, well-fed bird, akin to red meat, great for winter with a rich gravy and hearty red wine.
Come on. Get out of your food rut.

Anonymous wrote:Yuk. My mother served goose on holidays when I was growing up. It’s disgusting - greasy and gamey.