Cooking Goose Meat

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Cooking a goose, or goose meat in general, is not so hard as people seem to think. But it does present some challenges, no matter if you are buying goose at the store, or hunting them.

Canada geese, especially, get a bad rap. We all know this goose. It’s the one that chokes our parks, wanders around our neighborhoods and leaves great cylindrical snakes o’crap all over the place. Sky carp. Flying rats, Stinking, arrogant hissing birds that frighten children.

Two Canada geese swimming
Photo courtesy of Shutterstock

Yeah, Canadas can be all of these things. But in the right circumstances they — and all the other species of goose — can be wonderful at the table, in many ways better even than either a domestic goose or a wild specklebelly goose, which is known to those of us who hunt them as “the ribeye of the sky.”

OK, let’s start with a rundown of species, because the goose meat you cook will be different depending on it.

First, there will be the domesticated goose. These are primarily descendants of the European graylag goose, Anser anser, who is cousin to our whitefront or specklebelly goose, Anser albifrons. Another early place of domestication, Asia, worked with the native swan goose there.

More than 3000 years of domestication has altered domesticated geese significantly. They are larger and fatter than any wild goose. Their meat will be softer and less dense than wild ones. We’ll get to cooking farmed geese in a moment.

Here in North America, we primarily hunt Canada geese, snow geese and whitefronts. Emperor geese and the Atlantic and Pacific brants also fall into this mix.

I’ve written about eating snow geese extensively here, so I will refer you to that article if that’s what you are looking for. Short version: snow geese are one of my favorite sources of skinless goose meat.

Brants are easy: Skin them on the East Coast, pluck on Pacific. It’s diet related. Pacific brant eat eelgrass, which gives them wonderful white fat that is not at all fishy. Atlantic brant eat sea lettuce, a seaweed, and their fat stinks of low tide.

Whitefront geese eating grass.
Photo courtesy of Shutterstock

Whitefronts (specklebelly geese) are universally regarded as the finest wild goose for eating. They are mostly seed and grain eaters, and are always nice tasting.

That leaves Canada geese. All sorts of geese look like Canadas, from tiny Aleutian geese no larger than a mallard, to the Giant Canadas, which can reportedly top 20 pounds. That, my friends, is one big-ass goose. Most honkers weigh around 12 pounds, more or less.

Canada geese live lives like large mallards, which is why you see them sharing the same park ponds. Both birds will eat just about anything, but geese really dig grass, and yes, grain. How a Canada tastes depends on what that bird ate before you shot it. And because they are such eclectic eaters, it matters.

This is a universal truth: The quality of goose meat hinges on the bird’s diet, farmed or wild.

Plucking or Skinning

When it comes to cleaning geese, most of you will be working with store-bought birds. And while most are already plucked and gutted, you will still want to remove the giblets (often in a little bag in the cavity) and the bog blobs of fat in the cavity.

The fat you will want to render — here is my tutorial on how to render duck fat — and the giblets are great for a variety of recipes. I have an entire selection of goose giblets recipes here.

Those two things apply to wild geese, too, but you have to get there first. Plucking geese turns lots of people off. This is understandable: Once you start talking about an animal 12 pounds or larger, everything gets harder to deal with.

The feathers on a large Canada are tough to remove, and waxing one takes two full blocks of paraffin. God help you if you try to dry-pluck one. I only pluck Canada geese when I have only a few, or when I have many, only the ones that are not shot up. It’s work, but it’s worth it.

Hank Shaw holding a plucked Canada goose
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

Plucking snow geese can be difficult, and I only do it when they are fat, which is rare. I always pluck whitefront geese and Pacific brant.

Cooking Goose Meat

Once you have your geese, now what?

Let’s start with those of you who have a whole, store-bough goose. Chances are you want to roast it whole for a special occasion. My advice is to use my recipe for roast goose on Simply Recipes. It is designed for farmed birds.

If you aren’t set on cooking a whole goose, my strong advice is to break it down, wild or farmed. The reason is because you want to cook goose breast no more than to about 135°F internal temperature, but goose legs need more time, about 165°F internal temperature. That’s impossible with a whole bird.

Here’s the shortcut: Always cook breast meat like steak, and legs and wings like brisket. The way you cook a goose is the way you cook beef. In the kitchen, they are not treated like birds.

Slow roasted Canada goose legs over roasted vegetables.
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

If you have straight up goose meat, which is what most hunters come home with — skinless, boneless breasts, and/or skinless legs — here are some options.

First off, know that goose meat is basically steak, from the equivalent of a really old cow. Geese can live beyond 30 years, and that’s an incredibly old bird. Its meat will be far tougher than a young goose. You never need worry about this with domesticated geese, because they are always less than a year old.

Goose meat, in my opinion, is 100 percent interchangeable with venison, and can be used in beef recipes, too. Common ways to deal with it include:

If you have a fat, skin-on goose breast of any species, you can make a wonderful German smoked goose breast recipe I do when I am so lucky as to have them.

German smoked goose breast on a cutting board
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

As for the legs, they are a slow cooker meat with few equals. Start here for goose leg options. Any recipe you can think of where you slow cook meat, shred it, and use it in a dish will work with goose legs. If you need a place to start, you could do worse than this barbacoa recipe.

Keep in mind that I have a whole ton of duck and goose recipes on this site, and every new season I refine old recipes and add new ones.

What’s the takeaway? For hunters, know that there are all sorts of things you can do to cook goose that you might not have thought of before; they have advantages — largely size — that let you do some things you can’t with other waterfowl.

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About Hank Shaw

Hey there. Welcome to Hunter Angler Gardener Cook, the internet’s largest source of recipes and know-how for wild foods. I am a chef, author, and yes, hunter, angler, gardener, forager and cook. Follow me on Instagram and on Facebook.

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