Pork dropped on the spot will always out way pork that's been dogged and chased over any distance in my opinion.
Same goes for most wild game..younger mostly always rules when it comes to tender eh. Tough pigs make darn great small goods all the same.
Without a doubt, I agree mate
Growing up in Aus we had a lot of opportunity to eat wild pork. Everybody shot them Nobody ate them..
They ate rotten sheep, rotten gut shot roos and other assorted carrion.
Here in NZ the pigs have a great range of fresh green feed and simply taste so much better.!
The last wild pork I ate was a boar, dogged in the pines in cricket season on the coromandel. That was 25 years ago and I haven't touched it since!
I took this lot up to “feed” the feral pigs a few weeks ago. Western Ruapehu.
I won’t eat them from this particular area. They taste like shit. Just the thought of what they’ve been eating gives me worms.
But the purely grass and native fed pigs that I shoot from time to time here in the northern Kaimais (no pines near here) taste like the best damn pork you’ll ever eat.
So yeah, the answer is yes, @Tentman.
Just...say...the...word
BTW that trailer load was gone - literally - in less than 36 hours.
Just...say...the...word
Dropped some venison off today to my butcher for salamis. I asked Tony about Wild Pork for salamis, absolutely worth the effort of doing it.
"ars longa, vita brevis"
Yip for sure
Depends on what they're eating, and that can depend on what the season is like. Like Pigs that live in the Pines can be pretty average compared with pigs that are living in the the scrub and feeding on pasture, but in a dry summer like we've had, even "good" pigs can be in poor nick and pretty rangy.
If you can afford to be a bit choosy about which pigs you shoot and eat, then your meals of wild pork should be good.
Young pork ribs marinated in honey and soy-sauce - bloody beautiful!!
I have shot a serious lot of pigs from Murch and agree they are pretty much always in good order - but - beware the Ferny boars. When big pigs eat Bracken Fern roots all winter they get a real bad taint and a boar roast will drive everyone out of the house with the stink. A good solution is to get a butcher to do the back lets of a boar into hams and cook them yourself when you want one. If they are raw from the Butcher they can be frozen and kept and then slow baked in an oven bag to cook them. Grass fed pigs from Canterbury are very good and maybe Otago grass and berry pigs are the best. If they are on dry grass in the late summer they can eat grass seeds and that 'finishes' them like grain in a sty
wild pork in a camp oven is a nice way to eat it just place the pork on green teatree sticks with the bark peeled off in the bottom of the camp oven then place the pork on top make sure the meat is not wet (pat it dry with handy towels) then put it on a gas ring or embers from a fire and cook it slowly then you can put spuds, kumara ect on top when it is half cooked then your greens on top half an hour before its cooked meat cooks in its own juice and smokes for a start till the juices stop that happening you can do other meats like this as well lamb chicken beef veno is good veno and some beef cuts can dry out abit so put tinfoil around them or on top if this happens and don,t forget low heat is best Bonaparte
Otago tussock pigs are excellent, as were a couple i shot up in the Gowan Valley. Others not so much
"The generalist hunter and angler is a well-fed mofo" - Steven Rinella
Pigs from pureora in the winter that have been eating a lot of miro berries are the best pork you will eat.
Pine pigs that are fat on Huhu bugs after rooting up rotten pine stumps are pretty dam tasty.
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