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Game recipes (80)

Delicious game recipes with rabbit, pheasant, grouse, venison, guinea fowl, pigeon and more. Find your Christmas roast goose recipe here, or try roast quail. Don't forget our warming game pies and casseroles.

Try these Game recipes

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Recipe by: Norma MacMillan
Reviews(1)
Venison is a particularly lean meat and makes a good flavoursome sausage, perfect for this sophisticated version of an all-time family favourite. Serve with broccoli florets or another seasonal green vegetable.
 
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Living in the country we receive several game birds on a regular basis,we work with the elderly and one dear old lady gave us this recipe she first used over 60 years ago ,tried it ,loved it and want to share it.
 
Recipe by: Maggie Pannell
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Pheasant is a succulent meat and although higher in fat than other game birds, most of this fat is monounsaturated. Adding split peas to the casserole provides satisfying carbohydrate and thickens the sauce.
 
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This is a simpler roast goose than my other recipe on the site, but equally delicious. My family loves either at Christmas.
 
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We always have roast goose for Christmas dinner, and this recipe makes an already special dish magnificent.
 
Recipe by: Chrissie Lloyd
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This delicious casserole featuring tender rabbit, mushrooms, and black pudding is perfect for a chilly autumn evening.
 
Recipe by: Maggie Pannell
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Sweet, tender rabbit meat is perfect in casseroles, and makes a great alternative to the usual chicken.
 
Recipe by: Christine Lipo
Reviews(5)
Impress your holiday guests with this crisp, moist and absolutely delicious roast goose. The recipe requires a day or two of advance preparation, but the results will create memories to last a lifetime and maybe even inspire a seasonal tradition.
 
Recipe by: Norma MacMillan
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Here, Madeira and juniper berries add wonderful flavour to a marinade for spatchcocked quail, which is then grilled. Served on a mound of lightly dressed raw vegetables, including fennel, mushrooms and bean sprouts, the quail make a filling main course salad, with bread or rolls to accompany.
 
Recipe by: Brenda Houghton
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Tender poached guinea fowl is served in a tangy sauce enriched with lemon and yoghurt. Try serving with steamed savoy cabbage, and plain or mixed rice or baked potatoes.
 
Recipe by: Norma MacMillan
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Guinea fowl cooked with shallots, ‘meaty’ chestnut mushrooms, peas and spinach in Madeira wine makes a great pie filling. In this modern version of a traditional favourite, the filling is baked in a pudding basin topped with a lovely, soft-textured potato pastry crust. Serve with Brussels sprouts and baby carrots.
 
Recipe by: Chrissie Lloyd
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Guinea fowl breast is lean and healthy – a rich source of B vitamins – and has an excellent flavour, enhanced here with a very simple, tangy sauce.
 
Recipe by: Maggie Pannell
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Venison is low in fat and, like all red meat, provides plenty of iron and minerals. It makes a mouth-watering casserole when cooked with beer and winter vegetables. For the best flavour choose a real ale or one of the popular ‘designer’ beers.
 
Recipe by: Chrissie Lloyd
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Here, ‘huffed’ or ‘houghed’ means wrapped, and in this 18th-century recipe iron-rich pheasant breasts are cooked in attractive pastry parcels.
 
Recipe by: Maggie Pannell
Reviews(1)
Cooking rabbit in white wine with earthy chestnut mushrooms and fragrant herbs gives it a real taste of the forest.
 
Recipe by: Chrissie Lloyd
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Rabbit and hare are both low-fat, high-protein meats. Both are rich in iron, B vitamins and phosphorus. Rabbit meat is pale and mild, whereas hare is dark and strong, and needs to be cooked for longer, in plenty of liquid.
 
Recipe by: Joely
Reviews(1)
This is a traditional Maltese stew.
 
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Guinea fowl, in season in autumn and winter, tastes like a cross between chicken and turkey, and is very lean. Here it's roasted with a fig and pistachio couscous stuffing and basted with a spicy lemon marinade to keep the meat deliciously moist. A leafy salad with fresh oranges makes a great side dish.
 
Recipe by: Chrissie Lloyd
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Pies, filled with whatever game that is in season, have been popular since the Middle Ages. Here, rum and red wine add a special touch.
 
Recipe by: Chrissie Lloyd
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Try this hearty warming cobbler full of diced rabbit, carrots, lentils and bacon.
 
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