Does anybody eat squab? What does it taste like?

Growing up in a central California Italian family, my father and uncles would hunt dove in September...and my Dad raised homing pigeons when I was around 5. I can still remember their peaceful coo and the smell of their food.
One of the highlights of the year was dove season when everyone made spaghetti sauce with squab/wild dove thus:
Brown the cleaned birds in Extra Virgin Olive Oil, S&P
Remove and reserve until the sauce is put together and you are ready to simmer them until tender
Add chopped onion (and somewhat later, a small amount of garlic...onion cooks slower than garlic:) to the EVOO - saute on med until translucent, S&P
Add tomatoes in whatever form you like (fresh, canned, chopped, puree), preferably not seasoned
Add chopped Italian parsley and 2 carrots cut into 4 pieces
Bring to a boil, add in dove/squab/pigeon, stir & reduce to a simmer
correct S&P if necessary
Simmer until the birds are tender...usually 1 to 1-1/2 hours, stirring gently and occasionally
Remove the tender birds to a serving platter
Toss cooked pasta with the sauce, sprinkle with freshly grated Pecorino Romano (not too much as it is salty)
Serve pasta with birds on the side.
 
Last edited:
I have Racing Homers. I would eat some, but they are too fast!
gig.gif
No, seriously, I bought 3 pair of breeders last July, & in one year, I now have 28. I raise chickens, turkeys, & quail to eat, so guess who's next.
droolin.gif
 
My cousins raised pigeons for meat, and we would grill them I liked them. We butchered them at a month old, I thought about raising a few to eat, but after training my homers,you get really attached and I don't think I can eat a pigeon anymore lol.
 
Quote:
Oh my gosh... that sounds unbelievably good!
tongue.png
Do you think it would mess up the recipe to substitute rice for pasta?

I wonder how common it was for Native people, other than my family, to eat squab? Anyone know?
 
Quote:
Oh my gosh... that sounds unbelievably good!
tongue.png
Do you think it would mess up the recipe to substitute rice for pasta?

I wonder how common it was for Native people, other than my family, to eat squab? Anyone know?

Passenger pigeons were a food source for Native Americans.
 
In the past 30 days there was a culinary contest at an Illinois university that featured (Michigan?) raised squab. Anyone see it and get the winning recipe?
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom