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Home » Crispy Fried Squirrel Recipe

6 February 2012

Crispy Fried Squirrel Recipe

Please share with your friends!

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This crispy fried squirrel recipe turns the meat from a wild, grey squirrel into a very ecologically sound choice for conscious cooks.

 

However cute they be, wild grey squirrels here in the UK are considered a vermin.

1981, the law has classed the grey squirrel as vermin. It has a long rap sheet. Greys gobble up birds’ eggs or chicks, rip bark off trees and destroy acorns, reducing the number of potential oak saplings.

Greys are often carriers of a virus called squirrel pox, which is lethal for the red squirrel.

perfectly legal to kill a grey squirrel. Indeed the law (sort of) encourages it. If you capture a grey squirrel, even accidentally (if it wanders into your garage, for instance), it is illegal to release it into the wild.

However, the method of ‘dispatch’ is all important — you must do it humanely.

Drowning doesn’t fit the bill — as window cleaner Raymond Elliott, of Branston, Staffordshire, discovered in 2010 after he helped a grey squirrel meet its end in a water butt. He was fined £1,547 and given a six-month conditional discharge. Had he killed the squirrel with an air rifle, or with a sharp blow to the head, he would have escaped prosecution.

Rather than let him go to waste, I soon had him skinned, paunched and butchered.

Squirrel Recipe

The next step involved consulting the ‘God of all Things Dead’ aka Mr Billy Rhomboid over at the Kill and Cure blog,

Neither Jon or I had eaten squirrel before and it went down a treat. Interestingly it tasted a whole lot like KFC.

Print
Crispy Fried Squirrel and Chips
Prep Time
15 mins
Cook Time
10 mins
Total Time
25 mins
 
Author: Jane Sarchet
Ingredients
  • 1 squirrel jointed
  • 2 eggs beaten
  • A small bowl of flour well seasoned
  • A small bowl of breadcrumbs
  • 2 tablespoons on oil or butter
Instructions
  1. Rinse the jointed squirrel under the tap and pat dry with kitchen paper.
  2. Dunk each piece in the beaten egg, then the flour, then the beaten egg again and finally in the breadcrumbs.
  3. Get the oil or butter really hot, then place in the pieces and leave along for 3-4 minutes until they have turned a crunchy golden brown. Turn over, cooking the other side until the meat is cooked through. Bear in mind that the shoulders will need less time in the pan than the saddle or legs. Serve with a great heap of homemade chips and a little pot of garlic mayo.

Please share with your friends!

51 shares

Filed Under: All Recipes, Meat & Seafood, The Kitchen, Wild Food

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Nikki says

    6 February 2012 at 9:10 pm

    I’ve got to admire you but don’t think squirrel would have gone down well in Mrs H’s abode!

    Reply
    • HedgeComber says

      6 February 2012 at 10:31 pm

      :o)

      Reply
  2. Charlene says

    7 February 2012 at 8:40 am

    I am conflicted with feelings of, “Aw, poor squirrel” and “Oooh, yummy!”

    Reply
  3. HedgeComber says

    7 February 2012 at 11:48 am

    Hehe, once upon a time the ‘poor squirrel’ feeling would have over-ridden the ‘Ooooh yummy!’ feeling for me too. Not any more though! :o)

    Reply
    • Charlene says

      7 February 2012 at 3:43 pm

      Not saying one would have over-ridden the other. Yummy food usually wins in the end with me. ;)

      Reply
  4. Les Dudley says

    7 February 2012 at 4:49 pm

    I take my hat off to you! I tired in vain to skin a squirrel and gave up any tips ?

    Reply
    • HedgeComber says

      7 February 2012 at 5:44 pm

      They tend to sit pretty still on a peanut feeder, still enough for a shot from an air rifle (although I’ve never shot anything other than a tin can – the men folk do the ‘deathy’ bit, I just turn it into food :)

      Reply
      • HedgeComber says

        8 February 2012 at 7:48 am

        Ha! Just been pointed out to me by Jon that I sooo read your question wrong! Sorry, yesterday was a lonnng day Les :)
        As for skinning them, it was tougher than rabbit to remove, but once you get going it’s not too bad. I also found it easier the use my hand to separate the meat from the skin, rather than a knife.
        Worth the bother? Yeah, I reckon it was. It’s a great quality meat, and nicely flavoured so I’d definitely take the time again.

  5. colouritgreen says

    10 February 2012 at 8:52 pm

    never tried Squirrel – keep meaning too,. dont have an air gun tho – my cat used to catch them.. but somehow… dont fancy that….

    Reply
  6. Nige says

    26 July 2020 at 5:06 pm

    Fried Squirrel , yummy.!

    Reply
    • Jane Sarchet says

      1 December 2020 at 4:50 pm

      Haha, weirdly, it is!

      Reply
  7. John says

    6 March 2023 at 4:18 pm

    KFS

    Reply
  8. Jane Sarchet says

    9 June 2023 at 8:16 am

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. 20+ Squirrel Recipes for Small Game Hunters says:
    12 November 2019 at 1:03 am

    […] Crispy Fried Squirrel and Chips […]

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Janie aka Hedgecomber

Living the real-food dream on a Cornish smallholding. Home-grown veggies, our hens’ eggs, foraged wild foods & local ingredients. From tasty wholesome meals to simple camping recipes, I guarantee a real foodie adventure!

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I share my home with Jonny and a little black rescue cat called Sassy. We breed Muscovy ducks for eggs and meat and have laying hens in the garden. And depending on the time of year, we’ll either have pigs in the field or bacon in the freezer. Read More…

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51 shares