Meateater Fish & Game Cookbook : Recipes and Techniques for Every Hunter and Angler - by Steven Rinella (Hardcover) (2024)

Book Synopsis

From the host of the television series and podcast MeatEater, the long-awaited definitive guide to cooking wild game, including fish and fowl, featuring more than 100 new recipes

"As a MeatEater fan who loves to cook, I can tell you that this book is a must-have."--Andrew Zimmern

When Steven Rinella hears from fans of his MeatEater show and podcast, it's often requests for more recipes. One of the most respected and beloved hunters in America, Rinella is also an accomplished wild game cook, and he offers recipes here that range from his takes on favorite staples to more surprising and exotic meals.

Big Game Techniques and strategies for butchering and cooking all big game, from whitetail deer to moose, wild hogs, and black bear, and recipes for everything from shanks to tongue.
Small Game How to prepare appetizers and main courses using common small game species such as squirrels and rabbits as well as lesser-known culinary treats like muskrat and beaver.
Waterfowl How to make the most of available waterfowl, ranging from favorites like mallards and wood ducks to more challenging birds, such as wild geese and diving ducks.
Upland Birds A wide variety of butchering methods for all upland birds, plus recipes, including Thanksgiving wild turkey, grilled grouse, and a fresh take on jalapeño poppers made with mourning dove.
Freshwater Fish Best practices for cleaning and cooking virtually all varieties of freshwater fish, including trout, bass, catfish, walleye, suckers, northern pike, eels, carp, and salmon.
Saltwater Fish Handling methods and recipes for common and not-so-common species of saltwater fish encountered by anglers everywhere, from Maine to the Bahamas, and from Southern California to northern British Columbia.
Everything else How to prepare great meals from wild clams, crabs, crayfish, mussels, snapping turtles, bullfrogs, and even sea cucumbers and alligators.

Whether you're cooking outdoors or in the kitchen, at the campfire or on the grill, this cookbook will be an indispensable guide for both novices and expert chefs.

"Rinella goes to the next level and offers some real deal culinary know-how to make sure that your friends and family will dig what you put on the table."--Guy Fieri

"[A] must-read cookbook for those seeking a taste of the wild."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)

Review Quotes

"As a MeatEater fan who loves to cook, I can tell you that this book is a must-have for anyone who ever spends any time harvesting food in the outdoors. The recipes are superb and simple, and the learning here is immense. Most importantly, home cooks looking for great ways to stretch their boundaries even in the smallest ways will delight in this superb reference for fish and game meat cookery. Steven Rinella is the total package when it comes to food and the great outdoors."--Andrew Zimmern

"Field-to-table cooking is 'the new black.' But when it comes to cookin' up wild game, it's important to give the animal the respect it deserves both in the field and the kitchen, as it's not as simple as just throwin' everything on the grill and expecting a great outcome. In The MeatEater Fish and Game Cookbook, Steven Rinella goes to the next level and offers some real deal culinary know-how to make sure that your friends and family will dig what you put on the table."--Guy Fieri

"As a hunter and a chef, I appreciate the mindfulness and awareness that Steven Rinella brings to conservation and food utilization. His work is thoughtful and necessary for a modern world that is reconnecting with its food sources."--Joshua Skenes

"In this insightful and straightforward look at cooking what one hunts, [Rinella] proves to be as skilled with a pen as he is with a gun. . . . Rinella includes clear, photo-enhanced instructions on gutting, skinning, and butchering, along with taste charts that explain the differing flavors and textures of similar beasts. . . . The nose-to-tail approach incorporates everything from bullfrog legs (simmered in butter and wine) to duck hearts (grilled and served with a walnut pesto). Rinella is at the top of his game in this must-read cookbook for those seeking a taste of the wild."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"Yes, you should actually buy this fish and game cookbook . . . full of helpful information for the hunter and non-hunter alike. . . . Anyone new to hunting or fishing will find a wealth of solutions to the mysteries upon which they are embarking. What strikes me about this book, however, is not how helpful it is for hunters. For while there can be no doubt about that . . . what is far more interesting is how useful this book is for people who don't hunt, who don't have game to process. . . . Due to Rinella's use of different types of game as an organizing principle, the book is wonderfully varied. There are recipes for goose pastrami, tea smoked duck, marrow bones and hot pots. Because he is not pinned to a restaurant or a region, Rinella is free to include recipes from all over the world, at varying levels of difficulty. He douses salmon in tequila to make a cilantro hinted gravlax, and fills up big pots to make a crab boil. . . . Is this a cookbook, as it claims, for every hunter and angler? Of course it is. But it's also a cookbook for everyone else."--The Daily Beast

About The Author

In addition to being an expert chef known for working with wild game, Steven Rinella is an outdoorsman, writer, and television and podcast personality with an exceptional ability to communicate the hunting lifestyle to a wide variety of audiences. The host of the television show and podcast MeatEater, he is also the author of two volumes of The Complete Guide to Hunting, Butchering, and Cooking Wild Game; Meat Eater: Adventures from the Life of an American Hunter; American Buffalo: In Search of a Lost Icon; and The Scavenger's Guide to Haute Cuisine. His writing has appeared in many publications, including Outside, Field & Stream, The New Yorker, Glamour, The New York Times, Men's Journal, Salon, O: The Oprah Magazine, Bowhunter, and the anthologies Best American Travel Writing and Best Food Writing.

Meateater Fish & Game Cookbook : Recipes and Techniques for Every Hunter and Angler - by Steven Rinella (Hardcover) (2024)

FAQs

Is Steve Rinella still with MeatEater? ›

Steven Rinella is the host of the long-running television show MeatEater and top-ranked MeatEater podcast.

Is Steve Rinella a chef? ›

Most of our guests will be pretty familiar with you and your show Steven, but I'll bet many don't have a full appreciation of the path that brought you to where you are today: writer, backcountry gourmet chef and of course TV personality. Give us the high level overview of how you got into the outdoors industry.

How long are MeatEater episodes? ›

MeatEater
No. of seasons11
No. of episodes120
Production
Running timeDomestic: half-hour
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Who started MeatEater? ›

MeatEater, Inc. is an outdoor lifestyle company founded by renowned writer and TV personality Steven Rinella.

Is Steven Rinella's wife? ›

Who is the CEO of MeatEater? ›

MeatEater, Inc. Please join us in welcoming our new CEO Jason Bergsman to MeatEater. Jason was integral to the founding of MeatEater, Inc. in 2018 and has been an invaluable board member for the last five years.

How much does Steve Rinella make per year? ›

A substantial amount of Steven Rinella's income comes from his Netflix original series, The MeatEater. The conservationist earns an approximated salary of $76,310.

Does Steven Rinella have a college degree? ›

PERSONAL: Education: Grand Valley State University, Allendale, MI, graduated; University of Montana, M.F.A.

Who bought MeatEater? ›

Chernin Group has become the principal investor in MeatEater Inc., a new outdoor-lifestyle company founded by Steven Rinella, author, podcaster and host of Netflix's “MeaterEater” series.

Does Steve Rinella have trichinosis? ›

Steven Rinella Explains How He Contracted Trichinosis on an Episode of MeatEater. Steven Rinella breaks down how he and several members of the MeatEater crew contracted trichinosis after eating some questionably cooked bear meat on a recently aired episode of MeatEater.

Where does MeatEater podcast rank? ›

Chart Rankings
#15United States/Sports
#206United States/Top Podcasts
#1United States/Sports/Wilderness
#12United States/Sports
#1Canada/Sports/Wilderness
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Did MeatEater give away the back 40? ›

Mark meets up with Nick Pinizzotto and Hank Forester from the National Deer Association to hand over the Back 40 Property, which will become an important part of their hunter recruitment program.

Who left MeatEater? ›

Remi Warren left Meateater. He said, “Rokslider is well-known. My money is on him and MeatEater splitting up because he refused to conform to their mold.” Warren has spent his entire life hunting and enjoys sharing his experiences and skills with others.

How many brothers does Steve Rinella have? ›

Steven Rinella, who is of Italian descent, was born in Twin Lake, Michigan on February 13, 1974. He grew up in Twin Lake along with his two older brothers, who were taught to hunt and fish at an early age by their father.

What does Matt Rinella do for a living? ›

Matt Rinella is a research ecologist and a lifelong hunter and angler.

What is Steve Rinella doing now? ›

Rinella is the host of MeatEater, a weekly half-hour hunting show.

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