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Crock pot neck roast

Started by olddogrib, October 10, 2011, 09:40:00 AM

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olddogrib

This probably belongs in the cooking column and I'm a bit ashamed to admit that I've never been one to utilize the neck meat, but I'd like to try it on the deer I killed this weekend.  I'm not too shabby at boning deer quarters but the last time I tried to remove the spine from the neck cut I got into spine/cartilage/something besides good lean meat.  What am I doing wrong and is there a secret to "coring" it?
"Wakan Tanka
Wakan Tanka
Pilamaya
Wichoni heh"

Izzy

Dont bone it and leave the crock pot alone. Slow roast it in the oven wrapped in foil. Its flavor rivals tenderloins if you ask me. And a good slow and low treatment makes it as tender as veal, even on old deer.

Night Wing

QuoteOriginally posted by Izzy:
Dont bone it and leave the crock pot alone. Slow roast it in the oven wrapped in foil. Its flavor rivals tenderloins if you ask me. And a good slow and low treatment makes it as tender as veal, even on old deer.
Thanks for the tip.     :)    Filed for future reference (eating).     :thumbsup:
Blacktail TD Recurve: 66", 42# @ 30". Arrow: 32", 2212. PW: 75 Grains. AW: 421 Grains. GPP: 10.02
Blacktail TD Recurve: 66", 37# @ 30". Arrow: 32", 2212. PW: 75 Grains. AW: 421 Grains. GPP: 11.37

straitera

Just last night finished slow cooking a pig neck roast in the slow cooker. Tonight, it'll be pork roast over jasmine rice, fresh salad, buttered French bread, & natures own hops, wheat, & barley mixed & molded into the finest beer you can imagine!

Trick to killing wild taste is to add 1-2 cups brewed coffee, fill up the rest of the way w/water to cover roast, onion soup mix (1 pack), & slow cook 10-12 hours. Same for venison also. No coffee flavor at all!
Buddy Bell

Trad is 60% mental & about 40% mental.


Doc Nock

I use neck whole without boning for my favorite deer dish. all other cuts are de-boned.

I brown it in butter and garlic, then season with Italian dry seasoning, fresh pressed garlic and as stated, slow roast in a "blue maggot (agate) roaster" for several hours on low heat (250*). I add just enough moisture throughout to make some gravy. I've tried wine (alcohol is driven off), water and spices, etc.

It falls off the bone and away from the neck sinew. I eat it as is with anything for fixins.

I also keep what's left and shred it up to make Mince Meat, for those who know what that is!  :)
The words "Child" and "terminal illness" should never share the same sentence! Those who care-do, others question!

TGMM Family of the Bow

Sasquatch LB

Cyclic-Rivers

Good news.

After this batch of venison stew, the necks next.
Relax,

You'll live longer!

Charlie Janssen

PBS Associate Member
Wisconsin Traditional Archers


>~TGMM~> <~Family~Of~The~Bow~<

J. Holden

Gotta get a deer this year...

-Jeremy  :coffee:
Pslam 46:10

"A real man rejects passivity and takes responsibility to lead, provide, protect, and teach expecting to receive the greater reward." Dr. Robert Lewis

Dave Bulla

Yup, by far my favorite roast from a deer.  The link posted by Bert Frelink has some good info.  My method is there in the third post.

The alternative is to make gravy and "hot roast beef (i.e.venison) sandwiches" or add some taters and carrots for a stew.

Basically any method you would use on a chuck roast works with neck.
Dave


I've come to believe that the keys to shooting well for me are good form, trusting the bow to do all the work, and having the confidence in the bow and myself to remain motionless and relaxed at release until the arrow hits the mark.

Blaino

never had a neck roast.  passed on a few shots so far this year.  i won't be doing that anymore so i can try this neck roast out.
"It's not the trophy, but the race. It's not the quarry,
but the chase."

Right Wing

Will give this a try the first chance I get!  Thanks.

M Sights

I wrap the neck roast is a few strips of bacon & put in a crockpot w/ cream of mushroom soup. Cook until meat starts to fall of the bone. As good as backstraps!

ronp

My wife's dad used to put the neck in one of those oven bags with some quartered up onions and put them in the oven at a fairly low temperature for a few hours.  Very tender and made a great gravy.
Ron Purdy

TGMM Family of the Bow
MTB
NRA

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