We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

When Holy God draws near in true revival, people come under terrible conviction of sin. The outstanding feature of spiritual awakening has been the profound consciousness of the Presence and holiness of God.
Henry Blackaby

Christmas Goose

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats Bbq list, Poultry 1 servings

INGREDIENTS

INSTRUCTIONS

SEE DIRECTIONS
My wife, who likes to volunteer me for challenges, decided to get a
goose for Christmas dinner this year. We'd planned to have it in
early afternoon, but shifted dinner to suppertime so we could lunch
on the clam chowder we didn't eat on Christmas Eve because the
cocktail party we'd gone to turned out to be a buffet with beef
tenderloin, onion tarts, and other goodies.
I'd never done a goose myself before, and had only vague memories of
helping with one many moons ago, so I did some research. The big
challenge, as you probably know, is the thick fat layer on domestic
geese. The recipes I turned up called for roasting, and I didn't want
to spend too long a time cooking it, so I planned to use a Weber
kettle with small fires on either side of charcoal and wood (apple,
since I have an unlimited supply). The barbecuing itself was actually
uninteresting -- about two and a half hours (with the air temp at the
top of the kettle in the 300's F.) until it reached an interior
temperature of 170 F in the inner thigh. Apparently goose is hard to
go too far wrong with; it doesn't dry out as badly as a lot of birds
when overcooked. The interesting part of the process was the
preparation for cooking, which I got from a Xerox my wife had
acquired somewhere (I don't have the reference on me, but think it
was out of the old Cook's Magazine):
Choose a smallish goose; anything over 13 lb. is likely to be old and
tough. A day, or better two, before you plan to cook it, take your
largest stockpot or lobster pot, fill it half full with water, and
bring to a boil. Remove the neck and innards from the goose's cavity
and pluck any remaining quills with pliers. Cut around the wishbone
with a sharp knife and remove it (anyone know why they want this
done?).
Puncture the goose's skin all over with a sharp point (the letter
recommended a barding needle; I just used an instant-read
thermometer), coming in at an oblique angle to avoid puncturing the
meat below the subcutaneous fat. Put the goose in the boiling water
for about a minute (or until "goose bumps" form). If, as is likely
(and was true for me) the goose won't fit all the way into the pot,
you'll have to turn it end-for-end and immerse the other end as well.
You'll want gloves for this operation, especially if you have to
"double-dip." I used disposable food-service gloves and got by, but
real rubber work gloves would have given better heat insulation.
Dry the goose and put it UNCOVERED on a broiling rack in the
refrigerator to dry the skin. The skin will tighten around the bird,
forcing some of the fat through the holes, though most of that will
happen during the cooking process.
To cook, rub salt and pepper over the goose and put lemon juice in the
cavity. You need a BIG drip pan -- I used a 99-cent disposable
turkey-roasting pan with high sides to reduce the chance that a spark
would set off a grease fire. I probably should have emptied the
grease a time or two along the way, but it was cold, it was
Christmas, my back hurt from injudicious lift on an oak limb on
Sunday, and I didn't. I got away with it this time; I certainly
wouldn't have tried doing so with a wood that was more likely to
"spit" than apple is, or that wasn't already burnt down substantially
before the fat was rendered.
The result was a goose that was very good, though not perfect: the
meat was firm as expected, with a good subtle smoke taste (goose, by
the way, does not "taste like chicken"; more like roast beef if
anything). The skin was mostly crisp and very good (cf. Peking duck),
though next time I will prick the skin more thoroughly and turn the
goose more often while it's cooking (this would be a good spit-cooked
item). There were still pockets of fat that I think were mainly due
to poor drainage.
Recipe by: John Martin
Posted to bbq-digest by "bozo@inforum.net" <bozo@inforum.net> on Nov
20, 1999, converted by MM_Buster v2.0l.

A Message from our Provider:

“Your life will have a purpose with the Saviour.”

How useful was this recipe?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this recipe.

We are sorry that this recipe was not useful for you!

Let us improve this recipe!

Tell us how we can improve this recipe?