From Field to Skillet: How I Learned to Make Venison Tender and Delicious

Venison gets an unfair reputation — people call it tough, gamey, or finicky. But after more than six years of learning, tinkering, and a few overcooked inedible mistakes, I’ve found the secret to turning this beautiful wild game into something melt-in-your-mouth tender. It’s not magic — just good technique, a mindful marinade, and a skillet hot enough to make Hank Shaw proud.

1. Start with quality
Good venison starts long before it hits the pan. Pick a clean, lean cut — the kind that shows care in field dressing and storage. If you’ve stocked your freezer after a hunt (or a gift from a friend), make sure it’s well-wrapped and free from freezer burn. The better your meat, the better your final dish.

2. Slice it right
Here’s the part most people overlook: how you cut the meat changes everything. Slice thin (less than 1/8 inch [3 mm]), against the grain, and while it’s still half-frozen. That half-frozen state gives you control. If it’s too frozen, you’ll be sawing through it. If it’s too thawed, you’ll end up mashing it. I probably learned this trick while watching America’s Test Kitchen one winter, and it’s been my quiet edge ever since.

3. Marinade that magic
This is where you build the flavor. Mix fish sauce, soy sauce, sesame oil, and a splash of dry wine. Then let it rest overnight in the refrigerator. The marinade seeps into the thin slices, giving your stir fry that rich, layered flavor that tastes like it came from a seasoned wok.

Here’s my marinade recipe. Feel free to use or modify it as needed! This marinade works well with any protein, and even tofu if you prefer vegetarian dishes!

  • 3/8 cup (90 mL) oyster sauce
  • 1/4 cup (60 mL) soy sauce
  • 1.5 T (22.5 mL) sesame oil
  • 1.5 T (22.5 mL) Shaoxing wine (I substitute in a dry white wine when I don’t have this on hand)

4. Hot skillet, quick cook
Here’s a move straight out of Hank Shaw’s (the Hunter Angler Gardener Cook) playbook. Get your skillet rip-roaring hot. Cover the bottom with about one-eighth inch (or 3 mm) of high-heat oil, and work in small batches. Lay the meat out in a single layer — no overcrowding.

Each side needs just a quick sear. When it’s this thin, the edges brown beautifully, and the center stays tender. This is where patience pays off — resist the urge to stir too early. This technique is called velveting, and will elevate your stir fry from merely good, to great.

5. Bring it all together
Once the venison’s seared, set it aside and toss your vegetables in that same pan. The oil and browned bits from the meat give your veggies an instant flavor boost. Toss in a high water vegetable such as frozen bell pepper to deglaze the pan. Combine everything, toss until the sauce clings, and serve it steaming over a bed of rice.

6. The reward
This dish represents six years of cooking smarter — not just harder. It’s the payoff from learning where texture meets timing and how to balance heat and patience. Add in homegrown vegetables from the garden, and you’ve got a true farm-to-table moment.

Venison doesn’t have to be tough. With the right prep, it’s tender, juicy, and just a little bit wild — in the best way.

And if you want to read the full story of this stir fry, read this post.

If this recipe helped you fall a little more in love with cooking wild game, I’d love to know! Hit that like button. Share this with a fellow homesteader or hunter. Subscribe to the blog for more down-to-earth stories and recipes from our kitchen to yours.

Related Posts

More Than a Meal: Raising Our Own Thanksgiving Turkeys

Discover the joys and challenges of raising backyard turkeys in this heartfelt story about patience, humor, and the journey from fluffy poults to Thanksgiving centerpiece. Learn personal lessons and practical insights from a family’s wild turkey-raising adventure.

Keep reading

How to Make Homemade Venison Jerky: Smoked vs Dehydrated

If you love making your own food from scratch, this homemade venison jerky recipe is a must-try. Whether you’re a hunter processing your latest deer or simply someone looking for a leaner, high-protein alternative to beef jerky, this step-by-step guide walks you through every stage: from processing and seasoning to smoking and dehydrating. We even…

Keep reading

Fifty Lemons and a Lesson in Waste

A reflective homesteading essay about turning fifty rescued lemons into food and connection. Learn how small choices and mindful reuse can reduce the 40% of food wasted in America every year.

Keep reading


#VenisonStirFry #WildGameCooking #FarmToTable #HomegrownEats #HankShawInspired #CookingTips #AmericasTestKitchen #LocalCooking #KitchenJourney

Comments

Leave a comment