Nut crumbed venison racks with hasselback kumara and hommus

Impress your guests with this deliciously decadent midwinter feast. We coat our New Zealand farmed venison racks in a pistachio and pine nut crumb and serve it on a bed of creamy hommus. Hasselback kumara look and taste divine and are surprisingly easy to prepare.

Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour
Course Dinner, Lunch
Servings 8 people

Ingredients
 
 

Pistachio and pine nut crumbed venison racks

Hasselback kumara

Instructions
 

  • Bring venison to room temperature.
  • Preheat the oven to 200°C.
  • For the kumara hasselback: place a kumara on a large metal spoon (to stop slicing all the way through). Using a small sharp knife, make several slices, leaving ½ cm at the bottom unsliced. Repeat with remaining kumara. Place hasselback kumara in an oven dish, drizzle generously with melted butter and season with salt and pepper. Bake for 50 minutes, until soft and slightly caramelized. Meanwhile, prepare the venison.
  • For the venison: Trim racks to fit your largest frying pan (alternatively, sear on the barbecue). Pat racks dry with a paper towel, drizzle with oil, then generously season with salt and black pepper. Add oil to a large frying pan over high heat and sear venison racks until brown all over, about 2-3 minutes each aside. Remove from heat, place in a deep oiled oven tray, and let cool. Add pistachios, pine nuts, garlic and a teaspoon of salt and pepper to a blender and pulse until combined. Brush venison racks with mustard then cover with pistachio and pine nut crumb. Cook in the oven for 25 minutes. To check if venison is cooked to medium rare, insert a metal skewer into the centre of the meat and hold for 5 seconds – it should come out warm. (Or insert a meat thermometer: for medium-rare it should be 57°C.) If not, return to the oven for a further 5 minutes. Remove venison from the oven and let it rest for 20 minutes.
  • To serve: Serve venison with hasselback kumara, hommus and a scattering of pistachio kernels.

Notes

Fresh tip: Make sure you ask your butcher for clean racks. If there is still meat on the bones, make sure you' French' them.
Keyword dairy free, gluten free
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

Venison is a beautiful game meat. It looks impressive but is surprisingly easy to cook. Try it with your family this weekend and choose your flavour combination from the ones we tried and tested for you.

For more information on New Zealand farmed venison, visit https://www.nzvenison.com/home.

5 from 1 vote (1 rating without comment)

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