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arrow chuker 03-03-2003 07:10 PM

Taste of antelope
 
I was wondering what antelope taste like. I love most wild meats just never had pronghorn. Is it compareable to deer.

bob d 03-03-2003 07:35 PM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
never had any but others have told me it tastes just like chicken.lol

skeeter 7MM 03-03-2003 08:12 PM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
Antelope is one of my favorite tasting big game animals. I have heard some say the taste like sage or strong, but all mine have tasted very good. I think a lot has to be said about field dressing, care after the shot and butchering in all biggame animals.

1eyedfish 03-03-2003 08:55 PM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
Think there good too.:D
have eatin quit a bit...some do say it tastes like sage but i never noticed that either.

Forgot in another post about mtn goats& big horn sheep...i had said i never eatin a wild goat

Forget /Forgot they where goats lops lol

WESTANER 03-03-2003 10:09 PM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
Speed goats taste better if you shoot em while there calm. If you shoot and miss or wound one the adrenaline rushes into the meat makeing it taste gamey or stong.
If it does taste stong turn it all into sausage.

handloader1 03-03-2003 10:26 PM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
Antelope is very good tasting!! My favorite is to feast on the heart, liver, garlic, and onions to celebrate the kill. Good luck.

DreaminBoutElk 03-04-2003 03:22 PM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
If you get some strong meat, I found a trick to mellow it significantly. Pack the meat in ice so that it is fully surrounded on all sides. Make sure that all of the melt water can drain away completely and NEVER let the water touch the meat. Keep adding ice as needed to keep the meat suspended. I do this for a few hours and the meat comes out perfectly. Same trick works for deer venison too. My wife doesn' t like gamey venison so I tone it down for her this way.
Be careful about getting your women folk to much of a taste for wild game though..they' ll eat up all your meat!!!!!!!

arrow chuker 03-04-2003 04:58 PM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
Thanks for the input. My wife and little girl loves deer meat we eat it at least twice a week.

AceHand 03-04-2003 06:21 PM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
We get a couple of antlergoats every year. Really like it. I explained my procedure of soaking in the cooking forum under soaking game or something like that. Antelope sometimes has an odor to it, that certain people can detect. Seems that if they haven' t been told that it has an odor, they don' t notice it. Perhaps they' ve eaten one which was not harvested or processed properly, THEN, there will be a definate odor, and the thought of it probably lasts a lifetime! lol. I wouldn' t recommend having someone else process it for you. I' m sure there are many good game processors out there, but I always do my own wild game. Happy eatin' !

PaJack 03-05-2003 07:10 AM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
Everyone has different taste,I ended up giveing most of mine away....[X(]

BeaverJack 03-05-2003 03:28 PM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
People are too persnickity ' bout what they eat. Odor, wild taste, all thet garbage. Hell, I' ve et coon an' didn' t know it taste bad til sumbody tolt me so. Ain' t everthin' ' sposed to smell like beef or taste like chicken. The best cheese I ever had was aged in horse hooey. Them italians sure know how to eat. Cain' t make a gun worth a heck, but their cheese is ' bout the best goin' . How ' bout some prarie goat spaghetti topped with some horse crap cheese? Wash ' er down with some proper moose juice (50% moosehead beer, 50% grain alchohol) an' you' ll be surprised what you might eat for desert!

elksniper 03-05-2003 06:12 PM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
Dreaminboutelk has let out some good info it works i have been using this whenever i could get to ice. It will certainly get the meat tasty enuf for anyone. Antelope is good, never ate a bad piece of dead animal flesh.

Duffy 03-06-2003 12:01 AM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
AceHand; " antlergoats" what an odd thing to call a pronghorn. They do not have antlers and they are not goats.

I like antelope about the best of all wild game. Bighorn sheep is maybe tied for top choice. And a good thick steak off a cow elk is sure hard to beat. But then my family eats lots of wild game (and other critters) and we like it all.

Robin

DARTanian 03-06-2003 05:43 PM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
actually they are prairie goats. my antelope went way too fast, ate him up in 3 weeks:D. i still have a hip bone in the freezer for the dog. HOPE I GET DRAWN THIS YEAR.;)

AceHand 03-06-2003 07:32 PM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
Duffy, I am aware of that. But, antelope, antlergoat, they sound sort of similar don' t they? You want to talk about sounding odd...whadda ya think about BeaverJack! lol! No offense BJ. Sorry if I wasn' t anatomically correct. Besides, sounds better than range maggots!
Like I said, we get a couple every year. Like it a lot. My favorite though, was my first moose. Young, melt-in-your-mouth tender, mmmmmm!

Duffy 03-09-2003 02:52 PM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
Hmmmmmmmm! your favorite is " moose" . Now that sounds kind of like " goose" so is that what you mean? Or down in your neck of the woods do you call elk or mule deer " moose" , the way some of you call pronghorn antelope " goats" ?

" Range maggots" , I always thought that is what cattle ranchers called domestic sheep.

1eyedfish 03-15-2003 08:26 AM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
But i think antelopes are really goats, they sure arnt antelopes.

In this state we call moose moose & mule deer , mule deer from what i have noticed. + a few other things.;)


Far as range maggets i think cattles linages go to ethiopia etc.

I heard thye use to live in the mtns/ higher elevations to antilopes long ago.

Whatever ya call im [:o]i like them .

(see some everyday out my back windows/ sometimes walking down the street/ road or in th back yard etc.

Duffy 03-16-2003 12:17 AM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
To quote from " BIG GAME OF NORTH AMERICA" (A Wildlife Management Institute Book)

" Pronghorn belong to the family Antilocapridae, indigenous only to North America"

" Early records often referred to the pronghorn as " antelope" a trem handed down through generations, resulting in its common use today. Therefore, the use of " antelope" is acceptable, but pronghorn is the accurate common name for the species.

And....
Mountain goats are " rupicaprines" or goat antelopes. They are related closely to the chamois of Europe but not to any species in North America. Some recent articles incorrectly claim that the mountain goat is a close relative of the pronghorn.

I just like to call things by their accepted names so as to avoid confusion. If a friend told me we were going " goat" hunting and I should bring the decoy, I would want to be sure I brought the right one.

Robin


jjt 03-17-2003 09:59 AM

RE: Taste of antelope
 
prong horns, goats, speed goats, praire goats, antler goats, antelope
these are just the names i can come up with off the top of my head all for the same animal
they might sound funny or wrong to a foreigner but for the people that are around them all of the time they are common names correct or not that is what we call them.
and they all taste great no matter what the name

pointedsnake 08-29-2011 01:44 PM

preparing and cooking antelope
 
I have been hunting and eating antelope for 8 years and have found the best process to handle and cook this game. Many people complain that the meat is very gamey. NOT SO if you do it right. First of all a one shot kill is best if you can do it. Carcass preparation is critical in having good tasting meat. I always skin and quarter the animal imediately, keeping urine, dirt and hair off the meat. Put it in a game bag and get to a place where you can de-bone, wash, trim and dry the meat. I then cut it up and place it in two quart zip lock bags and get it on ice, above and below the bags of meat. I strive to get this done within 2 hours of the kill. When I get home--usually within 24 hours, I trim the meat of sinew and connective tissue and remove any further debris or contamanents I may find. I then wrap it in plastic wrap first and then in heavy butcher paper. I had 10 month old back strap last night and it was great. I also usually marinate in a combination of of soy sauce, black pepper, worchestishire and garlic. Cook it fast on the grill at high heat, deep fry or pan fry to medium rare. Enjoy!

StabyhounDogs 08-29-2011 06:00 PM

A lot depends on how the meat was taken care of prior to butchering and haoe it is processed. Saw a few people keep the skinned animals in 80 degree temp. for two days before cooling. I bet that was foul tasting meat.

skinnnner 09-12-2011 05:49 AM

iv ate a few of them all i can say is next one i shoot ill be useing a 460 weatherby with round nose bullets,im hopeing i wont have much left to eat.but fun to hunt!

jwill 09-13-2011 08:53 AM

Got one last year. The meat was great, a little softer than deer, but I thought the taste was very good.

marianlee 09-14-2011 01:34 AM


Originally Posted by arrow chuker (Post 243342)
I was wondering what antelope taste like. I love most wild meats just never had pronghorn. Is it compareable to deer.

I haven't try to taste antelope .... But I know what's the envelop taste when I do sealed it :kt: ...Just kidding buddy....


Buy sporting goods and we'll hunt antelope ....:arms:

Muskyhunter1 10-07-2011 01:25 PM

Son and I got 4 last year. The family love them. Would like to go again.

woodsnwater 10-07-2011 04:31 PM


Originally Posted by arrow chuker (Post 243342)
I was wondering what antelope taste like. I love most wild meats just never had pronghorn. Is it compareable to deer.


I'd have an easier time eating the sage brush. Love to hunt em, especially when I know someone who wants the meat. Getting the meat cooled ASAP is a must. But even with the best prep, it still tastes like a speed goat. Please pass the beef.

Muley Hunter 10-08-2011 11:00 AM

I'm always curious when someone says meat taste like sage brush.

Do you eat sage brush? How do you know what it taste like? :confused0024:


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