Meat Rabbits

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Buttermilk Fried Rabbit


Photo by Holly A. Heyser
If you are blessed with a young cottontail rabbit or very young snowshoe hare or jackrabbit (look for white teeth and ears that tear easily), you can do what anyone who buys a domestic bunny can do: Fry it like a chicken.
This is a fried rabbit recipe based on a buttermilk fried chicken recipe from my friend Elise at Simply Recipes. I kicked up her spice mix by adding more garlic, cayenne and paprika, thus the red color.
You need a lot of oil for this, but you can reuse it a few times. When you’re done, let the oil cool and then pour it through a fine-mesh strainer with a piece of paper towel set inside it that has been set over a bowl or large measuring cup. The paper towel will filter the brown bits and you can just pour the strained oil back into the container.
Most rabbits are sold whole, and if you don’t know how to get them into serving pieces, here is a primer on how to cut up a rabbit.
buttermilk fried rabbit

I highly recommend you brine your rabbits before frying. A simple brine of 1/4 cup kosher salt to 4 cups water will do — the rabbit is going to get plenty of seasoning later. Submerge your bunny in this brine for up to 12 hours.
As a general rule, 1 domestic rabbit will serve 2-3, as will a jackrabbit. A snowshoe hare will serve 2, a cottontail about 1 1/2, and a squirrel just one.
Serves 4.
Prep Time: 8 hours
Cook Time: 45 minutes
  • 2 domestic rabbits or 3 cottontails, cut into serving pieces
  • 2 cups buttermilk
  • 2 tablespoons Italian seasoning, or 1/2 cup of mixed chopped fresh herbs like oregano, thyme and parsley
  • 1 tablespoon paprika
  • 1 tablespoon garlic powder
  • 2 teaspoons cayenne
  • 2 cups flour
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 cups vegetable oil
  1. Mix the buttermilk with the all the spices except the teaspoon of salt and the flour. Coat the rabbit with the mixture and set in a covered container overnight, or at least 8 hours.
  2. When you are ready to fry, pour the oil into a large pan — a big cast iron frying pan is ideal — and heat over medium-high heat. The general idea is you want the oil to come halfway up the side of the rabbit.
  3. Meanwhile, take the rabbit out of the buttermilk and let it drain in a colander. Don’t shake off the buttermilk or anything, just leave it there.
  4. Let the oil heat until it is about 325 degrees; this is the point where a sprinkle of flour will immediately sizzle. Do not let the oil smoke!
  5. When the oil is hot, pour the flour and salt into a plastic bag and shake to combine. Put a few pieces of rabbit into the bad and shake to get it coated in flour.
  6. Fry for 12-15 minutes. Fry gently — you want a steady sizzle, but nothing raging, and you definitely don’t want the rabbit to just sit in oil. You might need to adjust the heat a bit.
  7. Turn the rabbit pieces and fry for another 10-12 minutes. The belly flap pieces and the forelegs will come out first, followed by the loin, and the hind legs will come out last.
  8. You will probably need to fry in batches, so just leave the rabbit pieces in the colander until you are ready to flour them up and fry them. Don’t let the floured pieces sit.
  9. When the rabbit is good and fried, let them rest on a rack set over a paper towel to drain away any excess oil.
  10. Serve hot or at room temperature.
 
WILD RABBIT OR PHEASANT STEW
1 or 2 rabbits or pheasants
Salt, pepper and paprika to taste
1 c. sour cream
1 c. cream of mushroom soup
1/4 tsp. Worcestershire sauce
2 tbsp. instant onions

Season cut up meat. Mix sour cream, soup and Worcestershire sauce. Add instant onions. Cook in slow cooker on low for 8 hours.
 
PLEASE jayjay I'm on a diet your killing me here I'm sooooo hungry.
 
Hey rabbit is good for a diet Wild Man! Well maybe not the fried, so much.
 
Yeah they're good for a diet till you eat three or four of 'em, and fried with gravy is the best way to eat 'em, just like squirrels.
 
I am curious to see how many rabbits it takes to make it worth the time and hassle to butcher and process the meat for a relatively small amount of food. I live in a suburban area, so they are ideal, but just not sure if worth the money and time. Am I better off just buying cans of meat or is it the process itself that is a valuable skill?
 
well hoosier..that depends on the size of the rabbits in the area in which you live..if thier around the same size i been seeing in my yard latly.then one rabbit will feed 1 growenup,maybe 2..but then.i've seen some that'll feed at least 3 when it comes to just the meat.but of course veggies or what ever is need to be included just to make it more filling.
 
How many are you feeding at the table Hoosier nurse? If it is just one person at the table then one rabbit will give you enough for a meal or two. They are very easy to raise and easier to butcher and clean than chickens. I would say that it is a good skill to have and it's an easy one to learn.
 
Just bought 4 rabbits the past few weeks - Netherland Dwarf - 3 females, 1 male (lucky bugger, he's doing all he can to keep the rabbit population on the increase). Too early to know if he 'hit the mark' so to speak, but are hoping for 2-3 litters per rabbit per year, then will sell the babies, and use the money to buy more goods.

We are also over run with wild rabbits in our street - the neighbours are practically begging me to shoot them.
 
id be shooting the wild rabbits if i knew how to can rabbit meat.and had the needed setup for it to..
 

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