Ok, Who has eaten a Goose?

So far, I've eaten all my geese (six of them). They were delicious, and they tasted even better knowing they'd had a good life.

For me, the eating part wasn't a problem. I had planned to eat them, I couldn't possibly keep them during the winter, and I knew they would be miserable as farm geese - where they would have been killed and eaten anyways.

The killing part was a lot worse. Before I got my first two geese, I thought I would take them to a butcher or something when it was time for slaughtering. But as I got to know them, I found out I would have to do it myself, so they wouldn't get upset or scared. I used an axe, and worried that I would miss or not hit hard enough. It turned out I did neither, and they never knew what hit them. As soon as they were dead they started looking like Christmas dinner to me.

They were slow-roasted in the oven for several hours at very low heat, so they had crispy skin and tender, juicy meat. And the gravy was fantastic!
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My present goose Keld will probably outlive me. I now have arrangements made for the winter, so that's not an issue anymore. He is a pet and a person with capital P's, and right now he's sitting on my bed honking softly for me to come cuddle. I would miss him terribly if anything happened to him, and my friends would probably stop speaking to me if I ate him.
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I understand people like to eat them but I don't plan to slaughter any in the future. I'll eat them if the same situation arises or if one has a serious injury perhaps but I think I will be keeping them as orchard cleaners and mowers (and they make fertilizer)
 
I wouldn't think of slaughtering my geese but my mother raised Embdens yrs ago and I helped clean them. She gave us a goose for Christmas. It was delicious but I found it to be very greasy.
Goose Jerky
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I've cooked both goose and duck a few times, both wild and domestic, and they were always gamy tasting. I knew they would be greasy and accounted for that by keeping them on a raised rack and regular removing the drippings, so that wasn't an issue. I found it a disappointing experience every time.

I read the one post about soaking it in orange juice to remove the gamy flavor. Any of you cooks out there know if it would help to do a long soak, like 24 hours, in an apple cider brine like in this link? Think that would do it?

http://find.myrecipes.com/recipes/recipefinder.dyn?action=displayRecipe&recipe_id=701063
 
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Being of Germanic background, goose for Christmas, YUMMY! But eating my own, I don't think I could, not even one killed by the dog. I guess I am not a true farmer.
 

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