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GAME (FOOD)

(Redirected from Game animal)

'Game' is any animal hunted for food or not normally domesticated (such as venison). Game animals are also hunted for sport.
The type and range of animals hunted for food varies in different parts of the world. This will be influenced by climate, animal diversity, local taste and locally accepted view about what can or cannot be legitimately hunted. Sometimes a distinction is also made between varieties and species of a particular animal, such as wild or domestic turkey.
Common Pheasant, widely introduced and hunted as game.


Contents
Game by region
Africa
Australia
North America
United Kingdom
Game preparation
Game cooking
See also

Game by region


In some countries, game is classified, including legal classification with respect to licenses required, as either ''small game'' or ''large game''. Small game includes small animals and birds, such as rabbits, pheasants, doves, geese or ducks. A single small game license may cover all small game species and be subject to daily and yearly bag limits. Large game includes animals like deer, bear, and elk and are often subject to individual licensing where a separate license is required for each individual animal taken(tags). ''Big game'' is a term sometimes used interchangeably with large game although in other contexts it refers to large, usually African, mammals (like elephants) which are hunted mainly for trophies, not for food.
Africa

In Africa, wild animals hunted for their meat are called bushmeat; see that article for more detailed information on how this operates within the economy (for personal consumption and for money) and the law (including overexploitation and illegal imports). Animals hunted include, but are not limited to:

★ Various species of antelope

Cape buffalo

Wildebeest

Zebra

Elephant

Duiker

Kudu

Rhinoceros

Lion

Gemsbok

Hyena

Impala

Leopard
Some of these animals are endangered or otherwise protected, and thus it is illegal to hunt them.
An African Buffalo Bull.

In Africa, animals hunted for their pelts or ivory are sometimes referred to as ''big game''.
Also see the legal definition of game in Swaziland.
Australia

In Australia, game includes:

Deer

Duck

Magpie Geese

Water Buffalo

Banteng

Kangaroo

Rabbit

Crocodile is no longer legal to shoot, however it is farmed extensively

Wild Pig

Wild Goat
North America

In the U.S., Mexico and Canada, deer are the most commonly hunted big game. Game species in North America include:
Bobwhite Quail, an important North American gamebird.


Bear

Beaver

Bighorn Sheep

Buffalo

Caribou

Chukar

Deer

Dove

Duck

Elk (wapiti)

Goose

Grouse

Hare

Javelina/Peccary

Moose

Mountain goat
White-tailed Deer


Muskrat

Opossum

Partridge

Pigeon

Pheasant

Pronghorn antelope

Ptarmigan

Quail

Rabbit

Raccoon

Sandhill Crane

Squirrel

Swan

Turkey

Wild boar

Woodcock

Wolf

Coyote

Dall Sheep
United Kingdom

Game birds at Borough Market in London

In the UK game is defined in law by the Game Act 1831. Other (non-game birds) that are hunted for food in the UK are specified under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. UK law defines game as including:

Black grouse

Red grouse

Brown hare

Ptarmigan

Grey partridge (and red-legged partridge)

Common pheasant
Deer are not included in the definition, but similar controls provided to those in the Game Act apply to deer (from the Deer Act 1991). Deer hunted in the UK are:

Red deer

Roe deer

Fallow deer

Sika deer

Muntjac deer

Chinese water deer

★ and hybrids of these deer
Other animals which are hunted in the UK include:

Duck, including Mallard, Tufted Duck, Teal, Pintail and Pochard

Goose, including Greylag Goose, Canada Goose, Pink-footed Goose and in England and Wales White-fronted Goose

Woodpigeon

Woodcock

Snipe

Rabbit

Golden Plover

★ 'Note': Capercaillie are not currently hunted in the UK because of a recent decline in numbers and conservation projects towards their recovery. The ban is generally considered voluntary on private lands, and few birds live away from RSPB or Forestry Commission land anyway.

Game preparation


Once obtained, game meat must be processed. The method of processing varies by game species and size. Small game and fowl may simply be carried home to be butchered. Large game such as deer is quickly field-dressed by removing the viscera in the field, while very large animals like moose may be partially butchered in the field because of the difficulty of removing them intact from their habitat. Commercial processors often handle deer taken during deer seasons, sometimes even at supermarket meat counters. Otherwise the hunter handles butchering. The carcass is kept cool to minimize spoilage.
Some believe the meat tastes better and is more tender if it is hung and aged for a few days before processing; however, this adds to the risk of contamination. Small game can be processed essentially intact; after gutting and skinning or defeathering (by species), small animals are ready for cooking although they may be disjointed first. Large game must be processed by techniques commonly practiced by commercial butchers.

Game cooking


Generally game is cooked in the same ways as farmed meat. Because some game meat is leaner than traditional store-bought beef, overcooking is a common mishap which can be avoided if properly prepared.[1]It is sometimes grilled or cooked longer or by slow cooking or moist-heat methods to make it more tender, since some game tends to be tougher than farm-raised meat. Other methods of tenderizing include marinating as in the dish Hasenpfeffer. Traditionally, game meat used to be hung until "high", i.e. approaching a state of decomposition. The term 'gamey', 'gamy' refers to this usually desirable taste (''haut goût'').

Game recipes

About Game Meats

See also



Hunting

Big Game Hunter

Hunting in the United Kingdom

British Association for Shooting and Conservation

Game Conservancy Trust

Duck Hunting

Fishing

Fox hunting legislation

Hunting horn

Trapping

Persistence hunting

Ornithology

Wildlife

World Hunting Association

Hunter-gatherer

Endangered species

Overfishing

Bushmeat

Bushfood, something quite different

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