Recipes

Cooking with Kokanee Quinn: A Guide to Epic Venison Burrito Bowls

Cooking with Kokanee Quinn: A Guide to Epic Venison Burrito Bowls

Move over, fast-casual chains. Kokanee Quinn just did some digital scouting over at MeatEater and brought back a trophy: Lukas Leaf’s legendary Venison Burrito Bowl.

If you’re still standing in line for a lukewarm “double protein” bowl at Chipotle, consider this your intervention. This isn’t just lunch; it’s a mildly spicy, wild-game masterpiece that’ll make you wonder why you ever settled for mystery beef.

The Secret Sauce: Venison Tinga

The MVP of this bowl is the Venison Tinga. Lukas suggests keeping shredded meat in your freezer like a culinary savings account—you never know when you’ll need to make a withdrawal. Once you’ve got your fall-apart tender venison, you’re going to bath it in a smoky, spicy blend of chipotle and adobo.

Tip: If you want to level up, swap the oil for lard, bear fat, or duck fat. It’s the difference between a good bowl and a “write home to Mom” bowl.

The Build List

This recipe serves 4 to 6 people (or one very hungry hunter for a week of meal prep).

The Heavy Hitters:

  • The Meat: 3-4 cups of shredded venison.
  • The Tinga: Yellow onion, garlic, tomato sauce, and a full can of chipotles in adobo.
  • The Fresh Stuff: A bright Pico de Gallo with Roma tomatoes and jalapeños, plus a simple Guacamole (3 ripe avocados, lime, and a prayer).
  • The Crunch: Radishes and—if you’re feeling fancy—some pickled sweet corn.

How to Assemble

  1. Sauté & Simmer: Brown those onions in your fat of choice, toss in the pureed chipotle/tomato mix, and let it get happy. Add your shredded venison and let it soak up the vibes.
  2. Grain Game: Get some rice or quinoa going. (Pro tip: Quinoa adds a nice nuttiness that pairs perfectly with wild game).
  3. The Sides: Warm up your beans (refried or whole) with a dash of chili powder.
  4. The Final Touches: Mash that avocado, dice your tomatoes for the pico, and slice those radishes thin. If the radishes are too “bitey,” soak them in cold water for a minute to chill them out.

Why You’ll Love It

  • Meal Prep King: You can make the meat and the pickled corn weeks in advance.
  • Versatile: Not feeling the bowl? Throw it all in a giant tortilla and call it a day.
  • Better than Copycat: It’s got all the elements of your favorite takeout but with the lean, mean flavor of wild venison.

Next time you’re staring at a freezer full of roasts and wondering what to do, just remember: Kokanee Quinn and the MeatEater crew have already done the legwork for you.

Topics RecipesKokanee Quinn