We've got a pretty interesting Slow U coming up on Saturday March 13th. Check out the description belo and the article and video from the New York Times about the Locavore Hunter, Jackson Landers. Then buy tickets here.
Description:
Do you find yourself looking for sources of meat that are local, free
range, hormone and antibiotic free? Whitetail deer are roaming rural
and suburban New York and New Jersey in record numbers and may be as
'free range' as meat can get.
On March 13 from 2 to 5pm, join
Slow Food NYC for an afternoon with locavore hunter, writer and
instructor, Jackson Landers. Learn the basic information that an
aspiring locavore hunter needs to know to start hunting deer for food.
Techniques will be discussed that allow even apartment-dwelling
urbanites to hunt, dress, age and butcher their own meat for the cost
of a few tools and a hunting license. No pickup truck required.
Jackson
will also demonstrate how to butcher a venison hindquarter and a back
strap using only the utensils and appliances found in a typical
kitchen, while the staff at Jimmy's 43 will assist in cooking the back
strap and select hindquarter cuts for the class to try.
Proceeds from this event will help support the activities and programs of Slow Food NYC.
About Jackson Landers:
Jackson
attended Hampshire College and Virginia Commonwealth University. He
took up hunting as an adult in order to obtain meat without supporting
factory farms. Jackson teaches complete two day courses for adults to
learn everything necessary to hunt deer, including basic marksmanship
on a rifle range, a live field dressing demonstration and butchering.
Students cook and eat the deer that they helped to dress. His classes
have been the subject of an article in the New York Times, a video
documentary in the Times' web edition, coverage on NPR and he will also
be featured in an upcoming HBO documentary, directed by Barbara
Kopple. He is the author of 'Deer Hunting for Locavores' and is
currently working on a second book about hunting and eating invasive,
non-native species.
Jackson lives near Charlottesville,
Virginia with his wife, and two small children. Ages 3 and 6, they
refuse to eat broccoli or green beans, but enjoy flipping through
National Geographic and speculating as to what the hippos and giraffes
might taste like.
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