Rabbit Cacciatore over Pesto Orzo
Here's one of our latest for The Sportsman Channel: Rabbit Cacciatore over Pesto Orzo. If you've been hunting rabbits this winter, give this recipe a try. It's a traditional Italian dish usually served with chicken, but rabbit is so much better. Find the recipe here: http://www.thesportsmanchannel.com/2017/02/wild-rabbit-cacciatore-pesto-orzo-recipe/
For step-by-step instruction on how to hunt, field dress and cook rabbit, check out our book Hunting for Food.
An exciting update! We're super psyched to partner with the Joslyn Art Museum in Omaha to celebrate its Wild Spaces, Open Seasons: Hunting and Fishing in American Art exhibition. In addition to assisting the museum to develope a wild game hors' douevres menu for their patrons and public event on Friday, April 7, we are also giving a pheasant cleaning and cooking demo at the patrons event. While our demo is private, we'll hang out afterward for the public event, which will feature a lecture by Lily Raff McCaulou, author of Call of the Mild, at 7 p.m.
If you're in the Omaha area, come out to try some food, drink, mingle and walk through this amazing collection of works that feature our favorite subjects: hunting, fishing and the outdoors. The museum store is also offering autographed copies of our book Hunting for Food for sale. Reservation is required for the public event. It is $10 for Joslyn members and $20 for the public. Make your reservation here: https://www.joslyn.org/forms/one-time-ticket-event-purchase-3.aspx
The exhibit: Wild Spaces, Open Seasons is the first exhibition of its kind in the country, featuring a variety of portraits, landscapes, still lifes, and genre scenes, including iconic works by Thomas Cole, Thomas Eakins, Paul Manship, and John Singer Sargent, as well as pictures by artists who specialized “in the field,” such as Charles Deas, Alfred Jacob Miller, William T. Ranney, and Arthur Fitzwilliam Tait. The exhibition also sheds new light on modernist studies of sporting subjects by Arthur Dove, Marsden Hartley, and Max Weber. Together, the 64 works in the exhibition illuminate changing ideas about community, environment, national identity, landscape, and wildlife, offering compelling insights into one of our most familiar shared adventures. Entry into the Joslyn Art Museum is always free, but this special exhibition is ticketed, with special pricing for kids, members and students. For more information: https://www.joslyn.org/collections-and-exhibitions/temporary-exhibitions/details.aspx?ID=367
For step-by-step instruction on how to hunt, field dress and cook rabbit, check out our book Hunting for Food.
An exciting update! We're super psyched to partner with the Joslyn Art Museum in Omaha to celebrate its Wild Spaces, Open Seasons: Hunting and Fishing in American Art exhibition. In addition to assisting the museum to develope a wild game hors' douevres menu for their patrons and public event on Friday, April 7, we are also giving a pheasant cleaning and cooking demo at the patrons event. While our demo is private, we'll hang out afterward for the public event, which will feature a lecture by Lily Raff McCaulou, author of Call of the Mild, at 7 p.m.
If you're in the Omaha area, come out to try some food, drink, mingle and walk through this amazing collection of works that feature our favorite subjects: hunting, fishing and the outdoors. The museum store is also offering autographed copies of our book Hunting for Food for sale. Reservation is required for the public event. It is $10 for Joslyn members and $20 for the public. Make your reservation here: https://www.joslyn.org/forms/one-time-ticket-event-purchase-3.aspx
The exhibit: Wild Spaces, Open Seasons is the first exhibition of its kind in the country, featuring a variety of portraits, landscapes, still lifes, and genre scenes, including iconic works by Thomas Cole, Thomas Eakins, Paul Manship, and John Singer Sargent, as well as pictures by artists who specialized “in the field,” such as Charles Deas, Alfred Jacob Miller, William T. Ranney, and Arthur Fitzwilliam Tait. The exhibition also sheds new light on modernist studies of sporting subjects by Arthur Dove, Marsden Hartley, and Max Weber. Together, the 64 works in the exhibition illuminate changing ideas about community, environment, national identity, landscape, and wildlife, offering compelling insights into one of our most familiar shared adventures. Entry into the Joslyn Art Museum is always free, but this special exhibition is ticketed, with special pricing for kids, members and students. For more information: https://www.joslyn.org/collections-and-exhibitions/temporary-exhibitions/details.aspx?ID=367
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