Venison served with a creamy oyster chowder made from bacon, onion, bell pepper, leeks, stock, cream, thyme, and fresh oysters. It is a straightforward cold-weather dinner when you want a pan-cooked steak with something richer than a standard pan sauce.
toasted benne seeds or sesame seeds for garnish,optional
Prevent your screen from going dark
Instructions
In a medium sized pot over medium heat, cook the bacon until the fat has rendered and the bacon has started to brown. Add the onions and garlic and cook for 3 minutes. Add the leeks and bell peppers and cook for 2 minutes.
Add the stock, heavy cream, and thyme. Bring to a simmer over medium-high heat. Adjust the heat and cook at a slow simmer until the sauce has thickened enough to coat the back of a spoon.
Season with salt and pepper to taste. Add hot sauce to taste if using. Turn off the heat and add the oysters to the sauce. Stir gently to combine and let sit off of the heat for about 3 minutes, just enough to cook the oysters
NOTES
Cook the venison separately. Have the venison cooked to your liking before serving, since the chowder is the only part cooked in the recipe card method.
Render the bacon first. Let the bacon render its fat and brown before adding the onion and garlic, so the base has more flavor.
Cook the vegetables in order. Add the onion and garlic first, then the leeks and bell pepper, so the aromatics soften without the garlic scorching.
Simmer until spoon-coating. Once the stock, cream, and thyme go in, keep it at a slow simmer until the chowder thickens enough to coat the back of a spoon.
Season after it thickens. Add salt, pepper, and hot sauce only after the base has reduced, since the bacon and oyster liquor already bring salt.
Add the oysters off heat. Turn the heat off, stir them in gently, and let them sit about 3 minutes, just long enough to cook through without turning tough.