A good friend landed himself a deer the other day and provided me with a couple of venison loints. What to do what to do. Since I know that he know's his stuff (bleed out the deer correctly and so forth) I was confident that it wouldn't be too gamey.
I have a pile of blueberries left over from picking this summer so I started to think, why not dry rub and grill the loin, slice it up and serve it with a blueberry sauce. Being a little lazy and not having anything on hand to serve it with I decided to make it in too sandwiches using the home made pita bread I had made the night before.
Overall a winner I would say, like always lots of bold flavored and cooked as we like it!
Without further ado:
Venison Rub
- First salt the loin and let it come up to room temperature. What I mean by this is put an amount of salt on too it that you would put on to the meat if it was sitting in front of you on the table. I leave salt out of all my rubs to better control the component in the final taste. I let these loins come up to room temperature salted for about an hour.
- 2 Tablespoons Juniper Berries- 1 Tablespoon Granulated Garlic
- 1 Tablespoon Granulated Onion
- 1 Tablespoon Thyme
- 1 Teaspoon Cumin
- 1 Chipotle Pepper Ground
- 1 Teaspoon Aleppo Pepper
- 1/2 Teaspoon Corriander
Toast the whole spices, grind together in a mortar and pestle or spice grinder and mix all the ingredients together.


Blueberry Sauce1 Large White onion
4 Cloves Garlic
1.5 Cups Blueberries
1 Cup Blueberry WIne
1 Cup Red Wine
1 Cup Chicken Stock
Juice of 1 Lemon
1 Tablespoon Thyme
- Coarsley chop and sautee onion until soft, add chopped garlic for about a minute not allowing it to brown.
- Add blueberries and stir, let cook for about a minute, add wines and stock, bring to a boil and let simmer for at least 30 minutes, allowing to reduce as well

- Take off the heat, puree with hand blender and add in lemon juice and stir in the thymeTime to Eat!


At the Canadian National BBQ Championships in Whistler this summer they held a hamburger competition with no restrictions. After much thought and a couple drams we came up with our solution. Our absolute favorite flavor with beef is red wine. Whether as a braise for short ribs or a sauce for tenderloin, we enjoy nothing more. This led us to the red wine burger. In order to keep with our braise flavors we thought we would add in onions and garlic, both of which are traditional. Then we spiked them with one of our favorite ingredients wild mushrooms! In this case we used chantrelles.

Foccacia