WARNING: Vegetarians and PeTA Members stop reading now! (read here for a certified vegan review)
Whew, now that it is just us carnivores, let me tell you about one of the best meals I have ever had. It was an annual Sportsmens Club Game Dinner. Just in case any pesky PeTA members are still reading this (
hey, thanks for boosting my stats!) I am redacting all identifying information on the club from this blog post. Suffice it to say that it was an all American experience (
well, there was ONE French guy ooohhhlala to quote other women from our table) that could have been a Norman Rockwell tableau - if Norman's relatives had hunted, killed, dressed, butchered then cooked that famous Thanksgiving turkey!

It was a Saturday night banquet with a cash bar. Hiding behind a forest of supermarket brand Cabernet at the corner of the bar were some discrete green bottles. I wasn't hoping for great wine at this dinner, and I briefly lamented not bringing a bottle of Tiburizi to go with the Bear, Moose, Elk and Venison that was being served, but when the bartender showed me the AOC
Cotes du Ventoux label, well, I thought to myself, SCORE!
The wine was a mellow, delicious Rhone blend of Grenache, Syrah, Carignan and Cinsault, it was a great table wine - perfect for the evening, and at 14% ETOH, it was a solid pairing for the game; a subtle red with a lovely hint of spice, and a full finish. It was so easy to sip that I had polished my first glass off even before our table was called to the buffet for dinner.

This was a packed house of 250 Sportsmen and women who hunt for the sake of eating, and have a chef that transforms their game into haute cuisine to share with the community and raise money for local charities; it was the annual tasting of the year's bounty. After some amazing appetizers of Mini Bear Wellingtons, smoked pheasant, Elk and Wild Turkey Pate, and a special shout out to the Rabbit and Squirrel Ragout, my first glass was gone, and I was heading back to the bar for my second. All under the watchful gaze of a 11 point buck who more than likely could have been the sausage in that mini venison and elk sausage slider that I so eagerly savored. I said "Thank you" to the deer, and chewed on.
Drinking this French Rhone at a game dinner in a Sportsmans lodge made me feel connected to the past. And also connected to the Disney movie Beauty and the Beast. I may have been caught singing "
No one hunts like Gaston" after the tall, dark, handsome Frenchman left our table.

I sipped my wine and surveyed my tasting plate (and cup of delicious venison chili) I heard rumors of salad, but for me, the greens on my plate were Fiddleheads. I love fiddlehead ferns, they grow on the banks of the stream back home in Maine, and every spring, I am reminded of just how wonderful they are. It was an amazing night. I'll leave you with a slideshow:
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