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    Home » Meat and Game

    Breakfast Venison Hash with Vegetables

    Published: Mar 7, 2020 Modified: Feb 21, 2023 Author: Alan Bergo

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    Behold the glory of leftovers! Breakfast venison hash is a great example of how I use leftover wild game meat-especially braising cuts from deer. It also uses two culinary adjectives everyone I know loves: tender and crispy. 

    Venison shoulder hash with vegetables and spicy sour cream

    Story goes I'd come home after dinnertime from working on a few different videos for the grass fed lamb and goat farm I work with. None of the recipes were ready to eat yet, and I'd totally forgotten to plan out something for dinner.

    Boiled and fried meat 

    Racking my brain for the easiest, quickest thing I could make, I remembered that I'd taken some venison trim from butchering a leg to make stock for one of the videos, and the trim was meaty, meaty enough that it could make a meal. Now, boiled, unseasoned scrap and trim might not sound like the most appetizing thing, but it can be if treated right. 

    I don't know of any culture that has a specific name for the process, but it's definitely a thing, especially in the Middle East. I guarantee you: meat that's been cooked twice, first by browning and then simmering in liquid, followed by draining and a second browning makes for absolutely delicious, melt-in-your-mouth crispy chunks known as griblets in our house. 

    The process is as easy as it sounds: brown some chunks of meat (or just boil them if they have an odd shape, like a shank, etc) add stock or water, simmer until spoon-tender, then chill to help hold their shape. After chilling, you drain the meat well, using the stock for another purpose, and fry those spoon-tender pieces golden brown. 

    Vegetable hash ingredients: romanesco, bell peppers, turnips, Brussels Sprouts, cauliflower and carrots.
    Hash veggies can be whatever you want. I used romanesco, turnips, cauliflower, carrots and Brussels Sprouts.

    Hash

    Twice-cooked meat is only half the equation here. Vegetable hash is a great meat grinder for all the vegetal odds and ends lying around in the fridge: a couple radishes, a handful of spinach, the bottom of a butternut squash, a couple tired carrots or potatoes, that handful of cauliflower, three Brussels Sprouts that escaped the bag—you get the idea. 

    Blanching is key 

    Veggie hash is super easy, with one catch: you can't just throw the veggies in the pan raw. All the different vegetables will have different individual cooking times, and you need to level the playing field, which you do by blanching or otherwise par-cooking in some way. Blanching is preferable here as sautéing could lead to greasy veggies, and is how I would instruct my line cooks to prepare things like this, say, for Brunch. 

    After you blanch the vegetables, you drain them and add to the pan with the fried meat chunks, give them a toss, add some seasonings, and serve in a bowl. I often put a "swoosh" of sauce around the rim of the bowl or in the bottom of a deep bowl as a condiment, mayonnaise-y things like aioli or seasoned sour cream are great. 

    Using other meats 

    Most people think of corned beef when they hear the word hash, and you can use corned meat too. Some people might want to use ground beef or ground venison, but those won't cook up the same as chunks of cooked meat-trust me. If you want to make ground venison hash, you'll want to brown the meat on medium-heat first, then drain and add to the vegetables just to heat it through. 

    Venison shoulder hash with vegetables and spicy sour cream
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    5 from 1 vote

    Breakfast Venison Hash with Vegetables

    This is a small batch, I would suggest doubling it. The process here is what’s important, more than an exact recipe. Serves 2, scale as needed
    Prep Time10 minutes mins
    Cook Time15 minutes mins
    Total Time25 minutes mins
    Course: Main Course
    Cuisine: American
    Keyword: Hash, Venison
    Servings: 2 Servings
    Calories: 260kcal
    Author: Alan Bergo
    Cost: 5

    Equipment

    • 1 12 inch cast iron skillet or similar

    Ingredients

    Venison

    • 8 oz venison scrap trim, or stew meat, preferably from the neck or shoulder
    • Kosher salt and pepper
    • 2 cups meat stock or water in a pinch
    • Cooking oil or lard as needed

    Vegetables

    • 10 oz mixed vegetables preferably in a variety of colors*
    • 1 oz sliced green onions
    • Fresh torn herbs like basil or mint
    • Small handful of chopped Italian parsley
    • 1 teaspoon fresh ground cumin or to taste
    • 1 small clove garlic mashed to a paste

    Optional garnishes

    • Spicy mayonnaise sour cream, aioli, etc,
    • Lemon wedges

    Instructions

    Venison

    • Cut the venison roughly into 1 inch cubes, season with salt and pepper and allow to sit overnight in the fridge, uncovered (this step is optional, but helps build flavor).
    • Preheat the oven to 275.
    • Brown the venison on one side in the oil, then transfer to a small oven-safe soup pot. Pour the oil off from the pan and deglaze with a splash of the stock, scraping up the browned bits.
    • Pour the remaining stock and drippings over the venison in the small pot, cover, and cook for 2 hours. Chill the venison to firm it up and help it hold it’s shape.

    Vegetables

    • Bring a couple quarts of salted water to a boil, then blanch the vegetables individually until aldente to your taste. There is no need to chill the vegetables in water after blanching.

    To finish the hash and serve

    • Drain the meat from the stock and dry it well, reserving the stock for making soup or another purpose. Heat two tablespoons of oil in a large 12 inch skillet. Brown the venison again, then add the vegetables and heat through. Add a glug of oil if the pan threatens to dry out.
    • At the end, just before serving, stir in the smashed clove of garlic and the cumin to taste, along with the parsley and scallions if using.
    • Make a “swoosh” of some spicy aioli or another condiment in the bottom or side of each pre-warmed serving dish (a bowl is just fine too) spoon in the hash, sprinkle on some of the extra herbs, and serve.

    Notes

    You can use your favorite vegetables here. For the meat, since it's cooked until tender, you'll want to use venison shoulder or shanks. 

    Nutrition

    Serving: 8oz | Calories: 260kcal | Carbohydrates: 16g | Protein: 35g | Fat: 6g | Saturated Fat: 2g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 2g | Cholesterol: 104mg | Sodium: 444mg | Potassium: 1042mg | Fiber: 3g | Sugar: 7g | Vitamin A: 7IU | Vitamin C: 69mg | Calcium: 47mg | Iron: 5mg
    « Venison Heart Bolognese
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    Chef Alan Bergo

    HI, I'm Alan: James Beard Award-winning Chef, Author, Show Host and Forager. I've been writing about cooking wild food here for over a decade. Let me show you why foraging is the most delicious thing you'll ever do.

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