Home
This is for all of you that won't eat coon!

The other dark meat: Raccoon is making it to the table

By Lee Hill Kavanaugh | Kansas City Star

He rolls into the parking lot of Leon's Thriftway in an old, maroon Impala with a trunk full of frozen meat. Raccoon � the other dark meat.

In five minutes, Montrose, Mo., trapper Larry Brownsberger is sold out in the lot at 39th Street and Kensington Avenue. Word has gotten around about how clean his frozen raccoon carcasses are. How nicely they�re tucked up in their brown butcher paper. How they almost look like a trussed turkey � or something.

His loyal customers beam as they leave, thinking about the meal they'll soon be eating.

That is, as soon as the meat is thawed. Then brined. Soaked overnight. Parboiled for two hours. Slow-roasted or smoked or barbecued to perfection.

Raccoon, which made the first edition of The Joy of Cooking in 1931, is labor-intensive but well worth the time, aficionados say.

"Good things come to those who wait," says A. Reed, 86, who has been eating raccoon since she was a girl.

"This right here," she says, holding up a couple of brown packages tied with burlap string, �this is a great value. And really good eatin�. Best-kept secret around.�

Raccoons go for $3 to $7 � each, not per pound � and will feed about five adults. Four, if they�re really hungry.

Those who dine on raccoon meat sound the same refrain: It's good eatin'.

As long as you can get past the "ick" factor that it's a varmint, more often seen flattened on asphalt than featured on a restaurant menu. (One exception: French restaurant Le Fou Frog served raccoon about a dozen years ago, a waiter said.)

Eating varmints is even in vogue these days, at least in Britain. The New York Times reported last week that Brits are eating squirrels with wild abandon.

Here in Kansas City, you won't see many, if any, squirrel ads in the papers. But that's where Brownsberger was advertising his raccoons last week.

The meat isn�t USDA-inspected, and few state regulations apply, same as with deer and other game. No laws prevent trappers from selling raccoon carcasses.

As for diseases, raccoon rabies doesn't exist in Missouri, state conservation scientists say. It's an East Coast phenomenon. Parvo and distemper kill raccoons quickly but aren�t transferred to humans. Also, trappers are unlikely to sell meat from an animal that appears to be diseased.

"Raccoon meat is some of the healthiest meat you can eat," says Jeff Beringer, a furbearer resource biologist with the Missouri Department of Conservation.

"During grad school, my roommate and I ate 32 coons one winter. It was all free, and it was really good. If you think about being green and eating organically, raccoon meat is the ultimate organic food," with no steroids, no antibiotics, no growth hormones.

And when people eat wild meat, Beringer says, "it reminds the modernized society � people who usually eat food from a plastic wrapper � where food comes from.�

Statewide, consumption of raccoon meat can be tracked somewhat by how many raccoon pelts are harvested each year. In 2007, 118,166 pelts were sold.

But there are plenty more out there, Beringer says. The raccoon population "doubled in the '80s. There's more now than when Missouri was first settled."

He estimates there are about 20 raccoons per square mile of habitat.

In the wild, raccoons typically live five or six years. Populations that grow too dense can be decimated by disease, especially when temperatures drop, Beringer says.

"The animals huddle together, passing on the infections. In the winter, we sometimes have massive die-offs. If we can control the fluctuations in the populations by hunting and trapping, we can have healthier animals."

Fur trappers, who harvest most of the raccoons sold in Missouri, "try to kill as humanely as possible," says Beringer, a trapper himself. "It's part of the culture."

Pelts last year sold on average for about $17. They're used for coats and hats, and many are sold to Russia. But the conflict between Russia and Georgia severely cut into the fur-trading market, Beringer says. "Pelts will probably be less this year."

For the average person, who probably doesn't spend much time thinking how a steer or a pig or a chicken might meet its maker, raccoons may seem too cute to eat.

Until you try one.

At the Blue Springs home of Billy Washington, raccoon, fish, bison and deer are staples on his family�s table.

On this day, it's raccoon.

All night he has been soaking a carcass in a solution of salt and vinegar in a five-gallon bucket. Now he rinses the raccoon in his kitchen sink.

"Eating raccoon has never gone out of style. It's just hard to get unless you know somebody," he says as he carefully trims away the fat and the scent glands.

"My kids love eating game. They think eating deer and buffalo make you run faster and jump higher. My grandkids will just tear this one up, it'll be so good."

The meat is almost ready to be boiled, except for one thing: Although its head, innards and three paws have been removed, it still has one. That�s the law.

"They leave the paw on to prove it's not a cat or a dog," Washington says.

He cuts off the paw and drops the carcass into a stew pot, slices up a carrot, celery and onion, and sprinkles some seasoning into the water. Two and a half hours later, he transfers it to a Dutch oven. It looks a lot like chicken.

He bathes the raccoon with his own combination of barbecue sauces. Stuffs the cavity with canned sweet potatoes and pours the rest of the juice from the can over the breast.

"I follow the same tradition I watched when I was little. My uncle would cook 'em all day, saving the littlest coon for me," he says.

"If stores could sell coon, we�d run out of them. It's a long-hidden secret that they're so good."

After several hours, a delicious smell � roast beef? chicken? � drifts from the oven.

A mingling of garlic and onion and sweet-smelling spices.

And when Washington opens the lid, a tiny leg falls easily from the bone.

�See that? Tender as a mother�s love,� he says with a grin. �Good eatin�.�

And the taste?

Definitely not chicken.

Never tried it, but my Unc (with the hound) said it was good meat.



[Linked Image]
I wonder how many are picked up along the roadside - a little flattened, but well tenderized.
ive heard its pretty good eats.....some individuals over on a meat smoking board i read on occasion swear its great stuff and their posting have convinced others to try it, have yet to have someone that goes about preparing it to the guy's directions that didnt say it was good......if offered ive got no problems trying it but aint going out of my way to find one for the table......
Originally Posted by djs
I wonder how many are picked up along the roadside - a little flattened, but well tenderized.



Those are the ones you sell to the city boys grin
Don't care for it much myself. Their meat is soft and sweet.
I've got a buddy from Missouri who has tried it. Said it was terrible, could hardly get enough BBQ sauce on to wash it down.

Think I'll pass.
It is better than coot.
Think I'll pass too. Thank God, I'm not that hungry.
Originally Posted by SamOlson
I've got a buddy from Missouri who has tried it. Said it was terrible, could hardly get enough BBQ sauce on to wash it down.

Think I'll pass.


I had it a few times when I was young. I agree with your buddy. frown

It is quite dark and gamey.

Jerry
I tried it a couple of times when I was in school and we hunted and fished for alot of our dinners. Wasn't horrible, bit I've damn sure had better. Maybe I needed a better recipe, we just threw it on the pit and smoked it. Tough as a boot. C-
Originally Posted by ltppowell
It is better than coot.


that's not saying much. so is styrofoam.
like with some other things how yah care for the critter after its dead and how yah cook it may have a huge difference.....as i said no one who has prepared it in the way the guys on that forum told them have reported anything but outstanding results......as far as gamey critters, ive had many ppl tell me it aint worth cutting a speed goat into steaks cause they taste horrible, taken care of right its actually quite good.....taken care of wrong dogs will turn up their nose at it......
Almost anything tastes pretty good when prepared properly, even Cat! So many recipes, so few cats. grin
Originally Posted by SamOlson
I've got a buddy from Missouri who has tried it. Said it was terrible, could hardly get enough BBQ sauce on to wash it down.

Think I'll pass.


Probably like anything else, care, storage and preparation probably makes or breaks the meal. Can't tell you how many people who "hate fish" I have converted.
Whan I saw the title of the thread I thought maybe Jesse had flung another racial epithet at the Chosen One. Oh well.
Originally Posted by Barkoff
Originally Posted by SamOlson
I've got a buddy from Missouri who has tried it. Said it was terrible, could hardly get enough BBQ sauce on to wash it down.

Think I'll pass.


Probably like anything else, care, storage and preparation probably makes or breaks the meal. Can't tell you how many people who "hate fish" I have converted.


my wife refuses to eat northern pike........lil does she know she has eaten it a half dozen times without knowing......filleting them ASAP has a big difference in how "fishy" they taste....the knows it aint walleye but she hasnt been able to figure out just what it is grin
OH MAN, she just doesn't know what she is missing, I would rather eat Pike or Walleye over Salmon, Halibut or any of the others, hell Pike is good just cutting the meat off the bone fresh!
in a city named gillette (sp), arkansas they have a "coon supper" every year. every politician or want to be politician attends. i believe i read that it was held just a week or so ago. been a tradition for many years (maybe 50).
I've driven over to the south side of town to give away a coon. I've also dropped in on the cane-pole bucket sitters to give them a gasper or a jackfish. Pawned off some rank boar hogs as well. Those folks are always happy to get something to eat.
Les, she loves walleye but thinks northerns are way to fishy tasting.....im guessing her dad let them sit around awhile and didnt fillet them till the end of the day.....i tend to have them filleted rather quickly and as a result they rarely taste to fishy.....just fishy enough she knows she isnt eating walleye but she hasnt beat it out of me yet just what she is eating but doesnt mind eating it.....
We used to fish Lake Athapap at Flin Flon in NW Manitoba. I always took 50# of potatoes and a deep fat fryer with fish breading. We ate Walleye, Northern, and Lake Trout every day from 40 degree water. Couldn't hardly tell the difference. I think the cold water had something to do with it.
They have a lot of worms in them but I guess that won't hurt you if you cook them hot enough.
The Gillette coon supper is a big deal. Any politician that has any hopes will show up there and the Slovac Oyster supper. miles
Originally Posted by Steve_NO
Originally Posted by ltppowell
It is better than coot.


that's not saying much. so is styrofoam.


I'm a big time coot eater. I always bag my 15 when I get the chance (and that's a lot). Of course I didn't know they were called coot till I entered college and learned it in wildife ID class....Hung around too many coon asses as a kid I guess.

Anyway I've eat coon. I didn't care for it. My great grandmother used to say she loved it, but my grandmother said she also would take it off the stove/table if someone came over so they wouldn't see her cooking/eating it.
I recken hard time will bring out the coon eater in all of us. Times just ain't got that hard yet crazy

g
And I though a squirrel was hard to sneak in the house...

I can here it now.. is that the neighbors cat@!
Originally Posted by ScoutmasterRick
When I saw the title of the thread I thought maybe Jesse had flung another racial epithet at the Chosen One.


Me too.

BMT
Throw in a few stewed tadpoles for Kansas surf-n-turf.

Armadillo is next
Originally Posted by Spotshooter

Armadillo is next


'Possum on a half-shell.

The new "craze".
possums not bad if you cook right. i tryed it once not bad but a little greasy
I can see the headline: "Coon... It's not just for breakfast anymore."
grin
Originally Posted by rattler
Originally Posted by Barkoff
Originally Posted by SamOlson
I've got a buddy from Missouri who has tried it. Said it was terrible, could hardly get enough BBQ sauce on to wash it down.

Think I'll pass.


Probably like anything else, care, storage and preparation probably makes or breaks the meal. Can't tell you how many people who "hate fish" I have converted.


my wife refuses to eat northern pike........lil does she know she has eaten it a half dozen times without knowing......filleting them ASAP has a big difference in how "fishy" they taste....the knows it aint walleye but she hasnt been able to figure out just what it is grin


One of the best tips i ever got was to fill a bowl with ice and put it in the fridge with your fillets in a ziplock in the bowl. Boy, that really chills the fish down and keeps it fresh for a few days longer.
Originally Posted by Violator22
OH MAN, she just doesn't know what she is missing, I would rather eat Pike or Walleye over Salmon, Halibut or any of the others, hell Pike is good just cutting the meat off the bone fresh!


Not me. I like them all about equally. You can throw in Grayling, whitefish, catfish, sauger, and carp - assuming they are all properly prepared (for some- that means removing all the fat, or "grey meat"- like in carp). I can handle bones...

My wife won't eat the healthiest part of salmon- the fat, but I like it if it is fresh enough. Older freezer fish, I pass - it goes a bit rancid.

I've eaten Porky, but not coon. Porky isn't bad. I hear beaver isn't bad either..... that's the real beaver. I know about the other kind....
back in high school, we used to trade a fat coon for a six pack of Bud down at the Sweetwater Grocery in NW Jacksonville. The old black folks that hung out behind the store kept a fire going, and welcomed a tasty coon.
I like the meat myself, and have eaten a number of them.
My Grandmother liked possum. Grandad would catch them live and put them in a chicken coop and feed them corn for a while before he butchered them. I ate it when I was little but don't remember much about it. miles
Some guy on another website mentioned making possum jerky last week. Doesn't appeal to me, but apparently somebody likes 'em.
Never had coon or possum, but I've had porcupine and beaver. Both VERY tasty if properly cooked.
My aunt cooked one once and said it was really greasy. My grandma wouldn't let us eat it. laugh Fed us head's cheese but wouldn't let us eat racoon.

I would imagine with a porcupine you could eat your dinner and pick your teeth all at once. laugh
I'm with Grandma, because all I think of when I think of possums are the ones I've seen dragging other dead possums off the road to eat. Nice fat, grainfed cannibals; no thanks. sick
BBQ coon is very good if done right. Baked possum and sweet taters used to be a staple. It is too greasy for me though.
I'm not saying they wouldn't be really tasty, I'm just saying I'd probably puke if I knew what it was.
I've eaten escargot before, but not since I quit getting that drunk. whistle
What's wrong with Escargot'? Don't you eat Caviar?
Caviar is OK if you think it's been cooked, like I did...luckily! sick
No comparison,Cole!
Actually, NO! laugh
the one i ate was one that my buddy and i caught he had a oilfield hand that was a coonazz (white guy )staying at his parents hotel that took it and fatten it up on bread and buttermilk then baked it in the oven basting it with apple sauce like i said not bad but greasy just could'nt get the thought of a giant rat out of my head
As a kid out in the pasture saw a an old dead bloated cow. Threw a softball sized rock right at the part of the belly that was swelled up the biggest. Popped it in the side, and out crawls a possum from the hind end of the old dead rotting cow. You guys can eat all the possum's you want, I'll stick to the herbivores.
Hmmm. I had coon and it was OK by me. The game critters we love to chow down on the most are extremely lean meat. It appears that if one were to be in extreme conditions or even extended stays in the boonies, the fat content of coons,porkies and woodchucks/marmots etc are what would really save your life. You'd have to eat a ton of the lean meats to get enough fat in your diets to survive.
Originally Posted by EvilTwin
Hmmm. I had coon and it was OK by me. The game critters we love to chow down on the most are extremely lean meat. It appears that if one were to be in extreme conditions or even extended stays in the boonies, the fat content of coons,porkies and woodchucks/marmots etc are what would really save your life. You'd have to eat a ton of the lean meats to get enough fat in your diets to survive.

If you can find some acorns or other mast crops you can get some fats there...IF they're in season. I'm afraid I'd be on the back end of the learning curve in a pure survival situation. I have us set with water, food and meds in a disaster scenario, but, extended survival would require some...adjustments.
I had it years ago and it was great!.

When in college we always scrounged for meals on Sunday evenings, as the dining hall was closed. Discovered a shot-an-beer place, Murphy's , and got in the good graces of Murph himself, a retired Navy ship's cook. On Sunday evenings he would cook up a whole bunch of food for us (free). Did up BBQ coon sandwiches one night...delicious! Also had my first exposure to rocky mountain oysters at Murphs.

About a year later I was riding the "L" in Chicago and got turned around, winding up in the far south side. While walking around I saw folks roasting coons over trash cans on the sidewalk, acting just as natural as could be. A stark reminder of how different life can be for folks.

Almost asked them for a bite...almost.
© 24hourcampfire