K-man
AH legend
Only poor meat I’ve had was hippo. More than a couple bites and you’ll be spending the next day in the outhouse. Eland was the best followed by gemsbuck. Everything else in between. And waterbuck was great when handled properly.
You could make me eat that.Took a zebra last day of safari so I didn't get to try it. But I've been told it is the best of the best.
My favorite was Nyala tenderloin. I thought it was the best animal protein I ever ate! Even better than Eland.
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The waterbuck I had last year was obviously taken care of and was fantastic. I'd rate it as my favorite African animal I've had to eat along side of Springbok.
I've also enjoyed Warthog ribs, buffalo, two of which I've also read negative reports on. Not sure why, it ate very well.
The only meat I didn't care for that much was impala, I found it to be a bit tough and dry. Perhaps it wasn't prepared so well.
No problems with the food there.This is just a guess, but I wonder if people that don’t like warthogs are thinking that it will be like domestic pork or a fat feral pig. No subcoutanious fat and can be a little dry. The best sausage I’ve had in Africa was at @GAME 4 AFRICA SAFARIS and it was warthog . Also had grilled warthog in Mozambique and it was delicious.
I agree . Aging meat is critical. My wife and I specialize in extended dry aging of whole carcasses. I’ve aged beef out to 50 days and hogs out to 21days. I would suspect that a 30 day aging of eland or other large game like buffalo would be spectacular.I enjoyed everything served by my PH, including Waterbuck.
Sable sausage links were my breakfast favorite, everything else was served as steaks or chops.
I think there were 2 things that made things very good table fare. One was a large cooler to dry age the meat, another was a tenderizer just like they sell at Cabelas/BassPro. All the meat that was consumed in camp had been aged at least a week in the cooler, and sometimes as long as 2 weeks.
I didn't get to try Zebra or Eland, but enjoyed nearly every other PG you can name, and truly enjoyed all of it.
I believe I'm going to make a special request for eland/kudu ossobucco next time I go. I've made it out of beef shanks here any number of times, with a serving of polenta on the side. That's without doubt one of my favorite meals, cheap cut of beef though it is.There are many factors affecting the taste of meat, any of which can have positive or negative results; and this is not limited to game animals - I had a Wagyu ribeye the other night and it was tough as a shoe.
Consider first the animal: age, condition, diet, sex.
Next, how was it taken: one shot - clean kill, wounded and put up a fight or not recovered until the next day, chased for hours, charging? How was it handled after the kill: quartered and packed out for hours, loaded in the truck and driven around all day while you look for more, field dressed and taken directly to camp, butchered on the spot?
For me, recovery and handling after the kill have had the greatest influence on whether or not I tried some of the meat.
Watching an elephant get disassembled with axes, machetes, shovels, and rusty knives, and chunks of meat tossed onto piles on the ground does not warm one's appetite. There was a thread asking,"Why is a knife needed on a safari?" I guess a good answer would be, because I know where mine's been.
Then there's the flies; I swear I saw a swarm of them lift a chuck of elephant meat off the ground.
Don't forget parasites - internal and external, which, when the body temperature drops start looking for another host.
Taking all of the above into account, I have respectfully declined certain offerings, and enjoyed some fantastic meals.
Grilled Eland brisket is wonderful, Rhino was chewy but tasty - I think it was marinated for about 10 days, all the plains game can be quite good - depending on preparation. Cape Buffalo oxtail and ossobuco are very good.
I am not a fan of elephant, hippo, croc or gator. Camel tasted like it came from an animal which had not rested for months, they could make gum out of it.
In some instances the meat disappears with the trackers, other times it's the mainstay of the camp.