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How to pluck and draw game: a partridge or pheasant.

partridge ready to be plucked and drawnGame is a treat. We don’t shoot and I don’t know many people who do. Hero of the kitchen garden, John Coe, is a beater during the winter months and sometimes brings us a brace of pheasant. His presents are always hung and dressed, ready for the pot.

Occasionally we’re given a brace of pheasant or partridge, complete with feathers Until today, I have hung, skinned and drawn them, and then cooked them slowly, enclosed in a casserole. Now I know how to pluck a bird. By keeping the skin our repertoire of recipes has increased tenfold. The skin contains fat and makes for a more succulent bird. Roasting is now a possible option.

I’m working at a lovely house in Upend at the moment. Yesterday Carol and Patrick gave me a brace of partridge. I was delighted and spent a happy split second planning how to cook them. As I skin my game the Romanian way, there is only one recipe that really suits game prepared in this way. It’s mouth watering and will appear on this blog after Christmas. Update: 27 January 2007, we have now developed two more exellent recipes for skinned game. Check out the recipes section of the blog.

I was always a bit envious of people who could pluck game, imagining it to be a complex and fiddly procedure. Today I discovered that it’s not. When Patrick found out that I didn’t know how to pluck a bird he immediately volunteered to give me a lesson. He rustled up a carrier bag; I grabbed the birds they had given me. Patrick demonstrated and within minutes I was plucking my first bird. The plucking is straightforward. Dealing with fluttering feathers is not. Hence the carrier bag.

How to hang, pluck and draw a partridge or pheasant

  • Hang the bird for a couple of days (by the neck) in a cool place such as a garage or cold larder.
  • Cut off the head at the base of the neck with a decent pair of scissors. (Once you have got rid of this the whole procedure seems less ghoulish).
  • snap the lower legs at the joints and pull out the tendons. This takes some strength.
  • Cut off the wings at the joint. (you will find this in the fold between the wing and the body.)

Plucking the feathers:

It is easier to pluck a bird when it is warm. Let a bird reach room temperature before plucking, it makes an enormous difference

  • Find a carrier bag (any supermarket one will do)
  • Stand your carrier bag on a table, workbench, or in the sink (I use the sink) the bird will be plucked into this. Pull up the sides of the carrier bag so that you have an enclosed area in which to contain the plucked feathers.
  • Put a few sheets of newspaper around your working area to catch any stray feathers.
  • Hold the bird by the legs and brush the feathers on the breast and back (against the grain, so to speak) so they sit up a little. With small neat movements pluck the feathers away and down from the bird, ideally straight into the carrier bag.
    If skin comes away on the base of the feathers you are being too rough or trying to remove too many feathers at once. Experiment a little with this. You will soon get the feel of the most efficient plucking movement. I place my fingers on the skin around the plucking area.this stops the skin being plucked from the carcass along with the tips of the feathers.
  • Spread the tail feathers into a fan shape and pluck these following the line of the feather.
  • To remove the leg feathers, hold the body and brush the feathers smooth (with the grain) and pluck them sharply down in that direction.

Another friend sits down to pluck a bird, with a dustbin liner between her knees. The feathers are plucked with a short downwards movement, straight into the bag. It’s worth experimenting with different plucking methods to find one that suits you best. I find that some feathers are more easily removed ‘against the grain’ and some ‘with the grain’. The secret is in the short precise plucking movement. If you can get into a relaxed rythm it’s easy.

Drawing the bird

  • Remove the crop (from the head end) by gently putting a finger into the neck opening, rotating gently and pulling the crop out. If you are curious, you can open this to see what the last meal was. Remove the gullet and windpipe.
  • Now stick your forefinger up the birds bum. Rotate it gently and draw out the liver and guts. We freeze the livers to use in an excellent terrine.
  • Wash the bird (inside and out) and refrigerate for a couple of days before use.

If your bird smalls bad chuck it away, contained in a couple of tightly sealed carrier bags. Sometimes gun dogs will pick up a lost bird from a day or so before. This is rare but it has happened to us.

Skinning a bird:

Follow the steps for ‘How to hang, pluck and draw a partridge or pheasant’ then put your finger under the skin around the neck and loosen the skin. Hold the skin firmly and pull gently down towards the tail. The skin and feathers should come off in one piece. Once skinned, don’t forget to draw the bird (see above). Roasting is really out if you have skinned your bird but any casserole or recipe that encloses the bird will probably be sucessful. See our pheasant recipes, these were all cooked with skinned game and are excellent.


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80 Comments

  1. Fiona Nevile

    Hi Joseph

    Sorry to miss your comment.

    Always hang pheasant by the neck and all fowl!

    Hello Lesley

    I quite enjoy plucking a pheasant or a partridge. If I’m feeling lazy I skin them and use them in a casserole.

  2. Thanks for this, I really did not know where to start on a small bird! Thai just gave me the confidence to get stuck in!
    Now looking forward to the outcome for dinner tonight.

  3. Joseph

    Hi there
    Awesome website by the way!!! Fantastic!!!
    Just a quick question tho, I had been told by a friend that you had to bleed a pheasant first by chopping the head off and hanging by the feet??? Whats your thoughts on this idea???
    Also does this method apply/work to ducks, gease and turkeys?
    Cheers Joseph

  4. Kevin Swinden

    Thanks for the useful info on the site.

    This afternoon our Vizsla Dog who loves to hunt & Point held a beautiful point on game, he then proceeded to flush a pair of Partridges, I assume. Unfortunately for one of them who wasn’t fast enough it was apprehended. I am pleased to say it was all very quick and swift. I felt a little guilty as these birds may have been nesting, though I couldn’t actually see a nest the other bird flew off and survived, I guess now a lonely one. Out of respect I have brought the downed bird home and prepared and plucked. It was easier than I thought. I was astonished how much seed etc this bird had in its food sack !. I havent hung it just prep’d and placed it in the fridge to eat in a couple of days. I prefer meat less strong.

    Once again thanks for the advice on the site.

    Would I be right to assume they were a nesting pair (June) ?

    Kevin

  5. Kate Aylward

    Hi, just seen this website. Yesterday my dog brought me a fresh – killed but not too maimed hen pheasant. I didn’t see her catch it but there was a huge kerfuffle and another one flew away so I thought I would bring it home since the alternative was leaving it to rot.
    Unfortunately my (lack of) plucking skills meant a fair bit of the skin came off, but I had real trouble gutting the bird – it was a VERY smelly job. We have washed it but I’m a bit worried maybe it was a poorly pheasant and that’s why the dog got it? Do the innards usually smell awful? Please advise as I was planning to cook it tonight. We reserved the breasts and legs and they don’t smell bad so think I may not have managed to gut it very well initially. Meat looks OK and I’m pretty sure it wsn’t an old dead one as it was still twitching when the dog dropped it.
    I would like to add this was entirely unintentional and I don’t intend to make a habit of sending my dog after game birds.

    • Fiona Nevile

      Sometimes the innards can be a bit wiffy if you have hung the pheasant for too long. If it’s a fresh phesant and its innards are rank I would not eat it myself.

  6. Alexandra

    I’ve got two pheasants I found by the road. I’m in Scotland and it hasn’t been warm!They seem pretty fresh but I didn’t hit them so I don’t know for sure.

    .They have been in the shed for one day but lying flat, not hanging. I read the other note about them being ok if laid flat…my question is about the smell.

    How do I know if the birds are ‘ok gamy’ or ‘really, don’t eat this’ ? Will I only know once I have skinned, gutted, washed and then smell the meat itself? Hope to hear from someone soon!

  7. Fiona Nevile

    Hi Karen

    They will be fine if you laid them down.

    No we don’t use boiling water! But let them get to room temerature before you deal with them as it makes the whole process easier.

  8. BRILLIANT THANKS FOR THAT WILL LET YOU KNOW HOW I GET ON ONE MORE THING SHOULD I DO IT TOMORROW SUN OR MON ? AND ROUGHLY HOW LONG TO WAIT TO GET TO ROOM TEMP 2RS ?

  9. HI THERE WHAT A GREAT SITE. I WAS GIVEN 3 PHEASANTS YESTERDAY (SHOT FRESH)(BUT TO MY HORROR NOT PLUCKED OR GUTTED) I PUT THEM IN MY GARAGE BUT DID NOT HANG THEM ONLY LAID THEM DOWN WILL THEY STILL BE OK I HAVE HUNG THEM NOW AFTER READING YOUR INFO. I AM NOT SQEEMISH BUT THE ONES WEV’E HAD BEFORE WERE ALL DONE FOR US LOL. THIS WILL BE MY FIRST TIME CLEANING A BIRD. I READ ON ANOTHER SITE TO SUBMERGE THEM IN BOILING WATER I TAKE IT THIS IS NOT A PRACTICE YOU USE ?.

  10. Fiona Nevile

    Hi Allan

    What I meant was that you can store the game in the fridge for a couple of days before cooking.

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