roast squirrel
Photos by David Smith

Roast Squirrel with Orange Blackberry Cranberry Sauce

Here's a roast squirrel recipe that includes a few post-summer ingredients like blackberries and cranberries in a delicious sauce.

It's almost squirrel hunting season here in Wisconsin. This is a roast squirrel dish that's a bit of a departure from fried squirrel recipes. It's tasty and has some real nice visual appeal. Blackberries and cranberries have always been a good match for squirrel in my book.

The sauce is largely just a normal orange sauce you might use with duck, but with the berries, too.

Duck and squirrel are similar in some ways and I think this sauce would make a great compliment to either one or to other wild game.

roast squirrel

Ingredients

  • A couple of gray or fox squirrels, cleaned and quartered (I had a package of hind legs and forequarters from three or four squirrels, so that's what I used here)
  • 1 stick of butter
  • 1 or 2 yellow onions, thickly sliced
  • Half a dozen or so smashed cloves garlic
  • ¼ cup fresh thyme
  • 1 orange, skin-on, sliced into ¼-inch circles
  • 1 or 2 cups of fresh cranberries
  • 1 cup orange juice
  • 1 orange peel from one orange
  • ¼ cup light molasses
  • ½ cup light brown sugar (you could use honey too, but cut back on the amount)
  • A piece of fresh ginger about half the size of your thumb, grated or diced
  • ½ cup Grand Marnier orange liqueur
  • Salt
  • Cracked black pepper
  • At least a cup of fresh blackberries

1. Heat oven to 350 degrees.

2. Gently melt about ¾ of the stick of butter in a heavy frying pan or large, cast-iron skillet (I'm using cast iron for just about everything these days). Line the bottom of the skillet with a single layer of onion slices and all but one or two of the smashed garlic cloves. Toss in a handful of the cranberries.

3. Lay the squirrel pieces on top of the onion/garlic/cranberry bed, in a single layer and evenly spaced, then add salt and pepper. Sprinkle evenly with thyme leaves. Lay the orange slices on top (you don't need to completely cover with the orange slices, a few should do the job).

4. Into the oven with the skillet. Set the timer for 30 minutes.

roast squirrel

Now for the sauce

1. Combine the orange juice, orange peel, molasses, brown sugar, ginger, a couple cloves of smashed garlic, orange liqueur and a big handful of cranberries in a sauce pot. Heat to boiling, stirring constantly. Once it hits boil, turn the heat down and let it simmer, stirring regularly. Salt and pepper to taste, about a teaspoon each.

2. After simmering for 10-12 minutes, strain the liquid from the chunky stuff through a strainer, pressing the juice through the strainer with a rubber spatula. It doesn't have to be completely clear of the little bits, at least not for me. Return liquid to sauce pan and put on a low simmer.

Add most of the blackberries and loosely smash them to break them up a bit (save a few to add to the final plating). Reduce until you get the thickness you're looking for. You could add that last ¼ stick of butter here if you wish, to give it a little more richness. I chose not to.

roast squirrel

Back to the squirrel

5. After 30 minutes, remove skillet from oven and with tongs turn each piece of meat. There should be a good amount of liquid in the bottom of the skillet, but the meat should not be completely submerged. Cook for another 30 minutes.

6. After 30 minutes, turn the pieces of squirrel meat one more time and set the oven on broil. Broil for only 3-5 minutes or so, just enough to give a nice browning to the surface of the meat.

7. Plate it up, pour the sauce and dig in.

roast squirrel

A couple of wine recommendations for this dish: Von Stiehl Winery in Algoma, Wisconsin, makes a Cherry Bounce that's to die for, and Door Peninsula Winery in Sturgeon Bay makes a wonderful Blackberry Merlot. Both do nicely here. Of course, any good red wine will do, too.

I'm going to recreate this recipe when camping this autumn. Campfire roasted squirrel using a dutch oven over an open fire might present a bit of a challenge, but I'm up for it.

Like what you see here? Experience more articles and photographs about the great outdoors at the Facebook page, Stumpjack Outdoors.

NEXT: HOW TO TELL THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SQUIRREL AND RABBIT TRACKS

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