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Posted: 11/1/2011 12:38:33 PM EDT
There's an add in the local paper for Free Lop Ear Rabbits. I'm thinking it could fill the freezer, assuming they're any good.
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Lop ear rabbit soup and lop ear rabbit recipe doesn't seem to turn up anything of use.
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Not the ears your suppose to lop them off before preparation.
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Not sure if supposed to eat. lol I'm trying to figure out a good cover story. Somehow I doubt that they would like to hear that I want all of them for stew |
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Not sure if supposed to eat. lol I'm trying to figure out a good cover story. Somehow I doubt that they would like to hear that I want all of them for stew If you buy 30 rabbits I think they are going to suspect something. BTW. They are not small rabbits. Lops go somewhere around 7-10 lbs. |
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Hell yea they are good. A friend of mine use to give me the ones that did not make show quality. I fried them babys up. More tender than a wild cotton tail.
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Not sure if supposed to eat. lol I'm trying to figure out a good cover story. Somehow I doubt that they would like to hear that I want all of them for stew If you buy 30 rabbits I think they are going to suspect something. BTW. They are not small rabbits. Lops go somewhere around 7-10 lbs. LOL, true But they're free..... |
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My wife would shit a kitten if she read this thread. I'd pay to see that, LOL. Kittens are fun, cute, and huggy. |
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[Mic Dundee] You can eat em but they taste like shit [/Mic Dundee]
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My aunt had a recipe for them that was incredibly delicious.
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Looks under cooked put it back in the oven. |
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"You'll love these rabbits, they're going to make fine pets."
"I'm sure they would have." |
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Rabbit is generally tasty, I don't see why these wouldn't be good to eat.
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IIRC most comercial "meat" rabbits are the larger lop eared type
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Quoted: Most domestic rabbits are meat rabbits. Some breeds are specifically bred as pets but they were bred from meat stock animals so I suppose they'd be just as edible. |
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Yep. I had one as a pet when I was 10. It bit me so we ate it.
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There's an add in the local paper for Free Lop Ear Rabbits. I'm thinking it could fill the freezer, assuming they're any good. Girl I work with put up a "free to good home" bulletin at work, for her pet lop ear rabbit. I promptly put printed out and placed next to every bulletin the recipe for Hasenffefer. She was not amused. |
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Yep. I had one as a pet when I was 10. It bit me so we ate it. FTW! |
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My wife would shit a kitten if she read this thread. I'd pay to see that, LOL. Kittens are fun, cute, and huggy. Not after they have been shit out, all covered in crap. I would however toss in a hundred dollar bill to watch it happen. |
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I suppose it depends on what they've been feeding them . . . maybe . . . I dunno.
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It's probably no different than eating various breeds of cattle. I suspect at the table the differences are much less pronounced and it still comes of as beef either way. Variation between numerous animals within the same breed is significant enough that you could easily mistake Holstein for Angus by happening upon a tender and tasty Holstein side by side with a tough, bland Angus. But from a breeder's frame of reference, when raising numerous head, particularly when trying to maximize profits, the breed will make a significant difference.
Grab 'em and eat 'em. |
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I had a great conversation with the future wife about rabbits.
Me: I think we should get some rabbits. Her: (Excited!!!) What kind? The ones with the floppy ears? Me: Whatever kind tastes better. Her: Silence. Now if we do get rabbits, it has to be that we give the "extras" away for pets and that we will only eat them if the SHTF and we are starving. Didn't know she had them as pets when she was a kid. FML DP |
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Yes , they are gtg.
My experiance with them is they tend to have thicker fat under the hide. But thats no problem , just a observation. They eat great and are bigger than wild rabbits. |
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I had a great conversation with the future wife about rabbits. Me: I think we should get some rabbits. Her: (Excited!!!) What kind? The ones with the floppy ears? Me: Whatever kind tastes better. Her: Silence. Now if we do get rabbits, it has to be that we give the "extras" away for pets and that we will only eat them if the SHTF and we are starving. Didn't know she had them as pets when she was a kid. FML DP We had rabbits, as kids (sis, and I)...periodically had rabbit stew, as well. Took a couple years before we kids figured it out. |
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Had a guy who worked for me in in the Navy from Ghana, where iguanas and the like are a delicacy.
Had the family over for Thanksgiving and they went to the pet store for dinner. "They asked if we needed a cage or food and we said, 'Nope, we're good!'" |
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quote[It's a rabbit. They all taste like one.]quote
Agreed, assuming they have not been feed slop, as in distillery byproducts. |
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If it was just a pet then the ratio of meat to bone is not going to be good. Show rabbits have as one of their judging points, body type as in how much meat especially along the loin (back) there is. Chances are there will be more bone than meat on it if it was just a pet quality rabbit than used for showing or breeding show rabbits. If it is an older rabbit, cook it slow and at low temp for a long time. Even then it will likely be kind of chewy.
My wife raises rabbits to sell for show, 4H and pets. Not all make the grade as far as show quality so we have periodic population reductions. Rabbits 12 weeks old or less are really tender and you can cook them like chicken. The older rabbits are much tougher. We bone them out and then grind the meat. I would guess that I butcher 250+ rabbits a year. Butchered around Labor Day and ended up with almost 100 lbs of ground meat. Nice to be able to grow your own meat that is lower in fat and cholesterol, and higher in protein than about any other meat you can get. |
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My wife raises rabbits to sell for show, 4H and pets. Not all make the grade as far as show quality so we have periodic population reductions. Rabbits 12 weeks old or less are really tender and you can cook them like chicken. The older rabbits are much tougher. We bone them out and then grind the meat. I would guess that I butcher 250+ rabbits a year. Butchered around Labor Day and ended up with almost 100 lbs of ground meat. Nice to be able to grow your own meat that is lower in fat and cholesterol, and higher in protein than about any other meat you can get. |
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Looks under cooked put it back in the oven. |
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My wife raises rabbits to sell for show, 4H and pets. Not all make the grade as far as show quality so we have periodic population reductions. Rabbits 12 weeks old or less are really tender and you can cook them like chicken. The older rabbits are much tougher. We bone them out and then grind the meat. I would guess that I butcher 250+ rabbits a year. Butchered around Labor Day and ended up with almost 100 lbs of ground meat. Nice to be able to grow your own meat that is lower in fat and cholesterol, and higher in protein than about any other meat you can get. Really? Why? Unless someone is a vegetarian what difference does it make if rabbits are eaten? You are aware (probably not) that more rabbit is eaten in Europe than chicken? In WW II many families were kept in meat by raising their own rabbits because they were easy to care for, low cost and reproduced rapidly. My kids don't have a problem with this and help with the butchering. No different than helping clean fish that have been caught. One time my daughter went out to feed the rabbits, came back in the house shortly after holding her hand. She had been bitten and was bleeding a little. My wife asked which one and the daughter told her. Wife said she planned on selling that one soon. My daughter's response was "No, let's make sausage out of her". |
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There's an add in the local paper for Free Lop Ear Rabbits. I'm thinking it could fill the freezer, assuming they're any good. You don't want adults. Once they mature the hormones give them a gamey taste. You want to butcher them as fryers. |
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