Is there anything more satisfying than preparing your own food?
And by preparing I mean plucking a bird that has been squirrelled
from the wild. And when I say squirrelled I mean shot by a squirrel.....?
Pepe, Llanevan's
French Grey squirrel, is a very keen shot and an avid game lover.
Such is the time
of year when the byways of the country are decorated by game road kill due
to the vast quantities of birds that are grown and released to flap up in front
of polished guns, clutched by wealthy sports people. What the two barrels don't
get, the four wheels do. It is a wonderful thing to have a partridge in the
oven, but it's a bit much when you have to change up into fifth gear to ensure
you nab your tea. The unfortunate state of the game shooting business is that
money and sport transcend the instinct to eat and the sorry fact is that most
birds gunned from the air are simply buried. Buried in favour of being bothered
to feather them. If you pay upwards to four thousand pounds a day to stand
in the fog and mud with your brand new toy, which also cost a small fortune,
you would demand to see plenty of targets flying out of the thicket. Of
course it is up to the skill of the marksman as to whether they can bag
bragging rights around the fire in the evening, but with the dense cloud of
game that is presented a large tump of culled birds is usually guaranteed.
The successful
shooter might journey home with a couple of brace as a trophy, which hang
until purple in the garage, but the beautiful birds are rarely taken all the
way by the one who felled them from the sky.
All game birds at
Llanevan are wild. None are hatched and fattened for the sole purpose of sport.
If there are a few birds in the satchel at the end of a stalk it is a most
satisfying thing and when Pepe has his claws around the one barrel, twelve
bore, Aya shotgun, you can be sure of a tidy meal. James Johnston hates
squirrels as much as he hates sheep and so thankfully stays inside the house
when Pepe and I go out stalking. James is best left at home on subtle
missions, for his constant whining, wind breaking and spontaneous bursts
of poetry are not conducive to a successful 'lifting of the feathers'.
There are around
twelve breeding pairs of Snipe on the marshy summit of the hill. Snipe, along
with Woodcock, are still somewhat controversially included on the fair game
list. Both are petite, long beaked, secretive, but not overly
abundant breeds which are surely only included on the list because they are
very difficult to shoot. The Woodcock blends into the shadows and uses the
trees as a shield, while the Snipe, as it's name confirms, uses sharp angled
turns and bobbing dips when in flight.
"If you don't
get it in the first four yards of flight, forget it," so says Pepe Le
Popgun.
Pepe will only
shoot one of those two birds per stalk, any more would present a concern to
their future on the farm. The meat is a delicacy, but you don't get much bang
for your breast as you could serve a whole bird on a fifty pound note and as
the shooter gets first dibs I always have to settle for a pheasant. Suits me
just fine.
I favour the hen
because she has more corn yellow fat under her blouse, but again Pepe only
squirrels one per stalk ensuring sustained breeding for the future. The cock's,
however, can be more freely felled. The traditional breed is an impressive
bird; a sumptuous kaleidoscope of colour, but recently
the black European breed has been preferred because they are lighter
and offer a better target due to their higher flight. The traditional breed is
more of a gouger and hence can be weightier in the air, or will simply favour a
sprint to get away from danger. Another sign that the shooting is only
just about the sport.
Yesterday Pepe and
I had a successful stalk. One Snipe, one hen and one cock pheasant, a brace of
rabbits and a light aircraft, that had strayed into the Llanevan fly zone, were
the spoils of the day. There was a particularly dicey moment when Open
DeSantos, Llanevan's book making pigeon, meandered into Pepe's eye line and for
a split second it seemed that the air would become a puff of pound notes,
Racing Post and plummage.
A lead shot bird
has to be prepared with tenderness. Any erratic plucking around the area where
the pellets have pierced the flesh can mean pulling the skin clean off and that
is the best bit on the bird. One can sneeze on a Snipe and remove the feathers
in one, but the pheasant takes a while longer to undress. It is worth every
pinch.
We made
a gravy with the giblets and set our birds in a tin tray, on a bed of root
vegetables allowing the fat of the pheasant to soften them. The legs can be
tricksy on the pheasant as tennis racket taut ligaments are stretched out
within. The best form of removal is to break the scaled leg above the foot trap
it in the hinge of a door and pull. Hey presto! they are removed and the leg is
instantly tenderised.
It was, and is, a
beautiful feast that poachers have been enjoying for centuries, but the
crowning bite was a breakfast bagel this morning of re-fried pheasant, cabbage
and strawberry jam. Taste bud bliss. And to think that so many mirrored meals
end up in the soil when, with a little care, they could so happily benefit the
soul.
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