Hi, technically off topic as there are other recipes than sausage, but my Goose selection....
My main sausage for goose is this one -
http://honest-food.net/wild-game/duck-g ... e-sausage/
Though I have also used
http://honest-food.net/wild-game/duck-g ... -sausages/
The honest-food.net is an awesome resource for game cooking in general, I strongly recommend a peruse!
This is also a very good goose recipe -
http://lpoli.50webs.com/index_files/Goose%20pesto.pdf
Though my Toulouse ones are by far the most popular.
I use this for Jerky -
http://allrecipes.com/recipe/beef-jerky/ though the Teriyaki Goose Jerky from backwoods bound.com is excellent;
~ 1 – 2 goose breasts, skinned and de-boned
~ 1 – 10oz bottle teriyaki sauce
~ 1/2 cup soy sauce
~ 1/4 cup sugar
~ 1/2 bottle liquid smoke
~ 1 tbsp black pepper
Combine the ingredients except the goose in a bowl. Mix well.
Slice the breasts into strips 1/4" thick
Place meat in a large zip lock bag.
Pour in the marinade and seal.
Place in the refrigerator overnight. Turn often.
Remove the meat and drain.
Place in dehydrator for 8 – 9 hours or until desired consistency.
Store in zip lock bags or jars. Enjoy.
Any beef jerky recipe will work and I just cannot make enough of it to be honest!
Please please encourage your mate to make a small nick in the abdomen and get the liver, this is by far my most popular recipe for liver pate;
Step 1: Ingredients
2 lbs of goose liver
2 sticks of butter
Few tbsp of Bushmills
2 shallots
1 tbsp fresh sage or 1 tsp dry sage
1/2 cup heavy cream
A pinch of nutmeg
3 rashers smoky bacon
Salt and pepper, to taste
2 tsp Juniper berries
Step 2: Method
1. Clean the liver well from the veins and membranes. Cutting the livers into smaller size will make it easier to cook the liver.
2. Some recipes suggest that you soak the livers in milk before you use, but some recipes do not think that this step is necessary. If you choose to soak the liver in milk, soak it for at least 3 hours.( I don’t normally)
3. Chop the herbs, bacon and shallots finely.
4. Melt few tbsp of butter on a pan. Add the shallots and herbs and cook until soft. Add the bacon and add the liver. Season the liver with salt and pepper. Sautee for few minutes until the liver is thoroughly done. You need to keep flipping and stirring the liver.
5. Add few tbsp of the alcohol of your choice. You can set it aflame to burn out the alcohol. Scrape the bottom and the sides of the pan. Reduce until almost no liquid left. Season with salt and pepper and juniper.
6. Meanwhile, melt the rest of the butter in the microwave or pan. Discard the foam. Reserve few tbsp of the melted butter.
7. Process the liver mix in the food processor or blender with the cream and melted butter until smooth.
8. Oil a bowl, ramekin, or terrine. Transfer to the container. Drizzle with the reserved melted butter.
9. Refrigerate for few hours to overnight to let it set.
This is from
http://www.mahalo.com/how-to-make-goose-liver-pate/ but has been heavily adapted by me
I make breast pate, I cannot find my recipe this morning (YIKES!!)
But the basic recipe is;
4-6 breasts
1 onion, roughly chopped
2-3 carrots
Flour (tablespoon)
1 veg stock cube
1 pint red wine (try apple juice)
2 teaspoons sugar
Salt and pepper
Optional 3 garlic cloves
Prick the breasts all over with a fork, and brown the breasts, place into a large casserole dish.
Add the veg (and garlic) to the pan and gently fry until the onions are translucent, lay them around the goose.
Sprinkle the flour and the stock cube into the pan and draw up the juices, slowly add the wine/apple juice until reduced. Do not over thicken. Add sugar and season to taste. This then gets cooked at 160 for 3 hours (I have some in as we speak!)
Once cooked, allow to cool, cube and blitz meat in a food processor with;
2 tablespoons of fluid
Some onion and carrot from the original mix to juice it up
Cup of full cream
Dash of tabasco
2-3 rashers of cooked smoky bacon
I sometimes add a small amount of uncooked onion for flavour as well
This is then either transferred to an oiled loaf tin to be sliced and frozen or individually jarred for re-sale.
The casserole is equally cooked eaten as it is with rice or spuds (spuds being the traditional Falkland way)
Normally Ganders go into Sausage/Jerky while geese are reserved for pate. Sometimes old ganders are bloody hard to casserole down and they take a while to process.
I see more and more goose recipes on here, so I will add some of these to my collection!
Good luck!