I don't normally target geese, and the last one I shot I plucked and roasted whole and it was pretty marginal as table fare. So yesterday, instead I skinned the goose, took off boneless breasts and bone-in thighs, and saved them for the smoker. I also kept the neck, heart, wings and gizzard to mix in with ducks parts for stock. (Not a fan of liver of any kind . . . .)
I followed a recipe I found on the DU website for the smoking: Brined in cider/salt/garlic/bay cut with a little cider vinegar for 6 hours, then slow smoked over apple chunks at about 225 degrees to an internal temperature of 165. Flavor is good, but the meat turned out a bit dry for my taste. Not quite jerky, but not much internal moisture.
Interested in thoughts and recipes from those of you who smoke goose and duck. Skin on better to retain moisture and fat? Baste with oil or cover with bacon or salt pork in the smoker? Smoke to a lower internal temp? (I've always smoked poultry to 165 for food safety reasons, but I don't cook duck that high when I pan sear or grill it.)
I followed a recipe I found on the DU website for the smoking: Brined in cider/salt/garlic/bay cut with a little cider vinegar for 6 hours, then slow smoked over apple chunks at about 225 degrees to an internal temperature of 165. Flavor is good, but the meat turned out a bit dry for my taste. Not quite jerky, but not much internal moisture.
Interested in thoughts and recipes from those of you who smoke goose and duck. Skin on better to retain moisture and fat? Baste with oil or cover with bacon or salt pork in the smoker? Smoke to a lower internal temp? (I've always smoked poultry to 165 for food safety reasons, but I don't cook duck that high when I pan sear or grill it.)