30+ Heart Recipes (Nose to Tail Cooking) (2024)

Heart recipes are an easy way to incorporate more organ meats into your diet. While offal may be intimidating at first, it is some of the most nutrient-dense food available. The heart is a muscle, nothing more, and it’s one of the tastiest organ meats available.

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Venison Heart

It’s no secret that the diets of our ancestors looked a lot different than our diets today. The demand for organ meats and traditional foods is increasing as more people realize the health consequences of our heavily processed, sugar-laden Standard American Diet (or SAD as experts call it, with no small hint of irony).

People are seeking out traditionally fermented foods, and experimenting with sourdough recipes. They’re incorporating healthy, grass-fed fats and omega-rich fish into their diets.

And once again, people are coming back to eating organ meats.

In truth, the only place where people actually stopped eating organ meats is in the US. When we transitioned away from corner butcher shops to large-scale supermarkets, it became nearly impossible to keep highly perishable organ meats on the shelves.

When you’re working with nutrient-dense food, you have to deal with the practicalities of spoilage, and that doesn’t fit in with how big chain grocery stores operate.

You may have noticed that 90% of the volume of any grocery store is shelf-stable, nonperishable goods throughout the center aisles…with the real food, the perishable fresh food, just lining the outside edges.

It’s been like this for more than a generation, and most of us have forgotten how to prepare what were once the most prized and nutritious parts of the animal.

The knowledge is still out there, if you know where to look. I’ve compiled literally dozens of heart recipes to help you get started incorporating more nutrient-rich organ meats back into your diet, and take the “SAD” out of our American ways of eating.

Heart recipes are perfect for beginners, as the meat is generally mild and cooks very similar to fine steak. While the liver takes a bit of finesse to properly prepare and has an abrasive taste in the best of cases, the heart is mild and tender if prepared properly.

Finding your way back to a healthy way of eating is all about baby steps, and these heart recipes are sure to please even the pickiest carnivore.

If properly prepared, heart meat will taste like the most tender steak you’ve ever eaten. Don’t believe me? Take a look…

Where To Buy Heart Meat

In truth, it can be hard to find hearts available at the supermarket. Usually, all the organ meats are removed at the slaughterhouse, and they’re disposed of unless specifically requested.

There are custom butchers online that cater to the paleo/primal market that have begun to sell high-quality organ meats, and they can be ordered for a fraction of the cost of regular meat.

The Honest Bison sells all the following types:

The packages come pre-cleaned, sliced, and ready to cook. They’re the best online source for organ meats that I’ve found to date, and they also carry tripe, kidney, and liver.

One of the easiest ways to enjoy organ meats is ground in with hamburger, just as a small percentage of the meat. Since you’ll hardly taste it, it’s a good way to dip your toe into ancestral nutrition.

This package is about a 3/4 pound of ground bison with a few ounces of heart and liver ground for added nutrition, and you can eat it (or serve it) like a hamburger without even noticing.

How to Cook Heart

The heart is a muscle, in much the same way that every other cut of meat on an animal. In general, the most used muscles on an animal are the most flavorful, and they’re often what we refer to as “dark meat.”

Think of rich chicken thighs (high use) as opposed to the chicken breast (low use). Or pork shoulder (high use) as opposed to the low use white meat of pork loin.

In general, those more flavorful cuts are cooked low and slow, to help what would otherwise be a tough but flavorful cut become melt in your mouth tender.

When cooking heart meat, things are a bit different. It is a high-use muscle with incredible flavor, but it’s also a different type of muscle known as smooth muscle. It’s structurally different than movement muscles, and though it’s used continuously for an animal’s entire life…it remains tender and succulent to the end.

The Best Way to Cook Heart

The best way to cook heart is hot and fast, with plenty of fat (butter or oil), as you would a really fine steak. The properly prepared heart should be cooked like a filet minion, porterhouse, or ribeye steak. A hot and fast sear, and ideally left a bit rare for best flavor.

Tastes vary of course, and you can cook the meat however you choose. Plenty of people enjoy their steak well done, and others don’t like steak at all and will slow cook their meat into stew regardless of the cut.

While I think hot and fast is the best way to cook heart, I’m giving you all the options in this list of heart recipes.

How to Prepare a Heart for Cooking

If you’re sourcing heat meat from a butcher, it’s already been cleaned and the chambers should be empty and rinsed. It’s likely already been trimmed of excess fat and vessels from the outside.

If not, give it a quick rinse and trim off the outer lining of the heart. It should be a thin, nearly transparent film around the outside. This should only be necessary if you’ve harvested the animal yourself, and the butcher will most likely have prepared the heart for cooking ahead of time.

Smaller hearts, like duck and chicken hearts, can be prepared whole without any further preparation. Larger hearts, like beef hearts and venison hearts, will need to be trimmed into steaks or chunks.

I have a detailed tutorial on how to take a full-sized venison heart and trim it out into steaks. Believe it or not, the heart more or less opens like a book and will fold out into a single sheet steak if cut properly.

Once trimmed, the heart can be marinated (or not) and then cooked to your liking.

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A venison heart from a small white-tailed deer doe. Larger bucks will have larger hearts.

Heart Recipes

In general, the best way to cook heart is a hot and fast sear after it’s spent time in a flavorful marinade. That’s true regarding the hearts of most animals, but there are subtle differences in the way a heart can be prepared based on size.

Smaller hearts, like duck or chicken hearts, are absolutely delicious battered and fried whole, for example. Beef heart is often cooked in traditional recipes as chunks, marinated, and then grilled hot on kebab skewers.

Most traditional heart recipes are specific to the type of animal, not because heart meat tastes all that different on different animals (though there are subtle differences). Mostly it’s about size and portions, and the traditions of the culture that generally raised that type of animal historically.

Beef Heart Recipes

By far the largest heart you’ll find at the butcher’s counter, a whole beef heart is often around 3 to 4 pounds. Generally, beef heart is cut in half, both to make it a more manageable size for cooking, and for cleaning.

Slicing a heart in half means that it’s completely cleaned and trimmed, inside and out. It’s also trimmed flat, so it’s ready for cooking as a heart steak if that’s your preference.

You can also trim it into kebab meat, grind it into a burger or toss it into stew. Beef heart is surprisingly versatile.

Grinding beef heart into a burger is one of the best ways to “hide it” if that’s your goal, and if you use 1 part beef heart to 3 parts ground beef, no one will ever know (even your picky kids).

You can actually buy it already ground and mixed here (made with bison).

While I think the heart is a truly marvelous cut worth taking center stage, sometimes you have to take baby steps when trying new things. Enjoying it as part of a ground mix is an easy way to dip your toe into organ meats without going crazy.

These recipes, however, really make the heart the center of the meal:

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Half a beef heart on a plate (about 2 pounds). This one has been trimmed and prepared by a butcher, and you can even see the blue meat packing inspection stamp.

Chicken Heart Recipes (& Duck, Goose, etc)

Poultry hearts are on the opposite end of the spectrum from beef hearts, and they’re quite small. With chicken hearts, in particular, you can cook them whole and they make all manner of dishes.

Think chicken heart tacos, with small whole (or halved) chicken hearts marinated in spicy taco seasoning. You can also batter and fry them, which is one of my favorite poultry heart recipes.

Most types of hearts taste quite similar, but if I had to pick one that is the “mildest” it’d have to be chicken. Beef heart tastes like steak, and the chicken heart does as well…but to a lesser extent. Animals that are harvested younger tend to have milder meat, and chickens are usually only a few months old when fully grown.

Given their small size, they’re also a smaller investment in both time, money, and ingredients. If you decide you don’t like beef heart, you have pounds of it on hand. Chicken hearts can be purchased and cooked in small batches, meaning they’re perfect if you’re looking for beginner heart recipes.

Duck Heart Recipes

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Duck heart is slightly larger than chicken heart, and has a slightly richer more developed flavor (but only slightly)

Lamb Heart Recipes (& Goat Heart)

As smaller animals, lamb hearts and goat hearts are much more manageable for a single meal. They don’t tend to have the gamey-ness of actual lamb or goat meat, and flavor-wise they’re only ever so slightly different than beef heart.

Given their size, they’re harder to trim out into a good sizes steak, but they’re a bit too large to cook whole (as you do with chicken hearts).

Generally, lamb hearts are chopped or diced into manageable pieces for cooking instead. They’re also good as a single serving, so you’ll often see stuffed lamb hearts, designed as one per person meal that makes a dramatic impression on the plate.

Game Meat Heart Recipes

For hunters, there are all manner of ways to prepare the heart from a successful hunt. While heart meat is generally milder than the rest of the animal, there is some natural gamey-ness to the hearts of wild animals.

That’s not because of the meat itself, but more due to the fat on the outside of the heart. Even lean animals have a good bit of fat on their hearts, and that fat often has gamey flavor notes when it’s from wild hunted game. If you’d like to reduce that, you can trim the heart of as much extra fat as possible and then fry it in a neutral oil like olive oil or butter.

That said, I think it’s lovely to appreciate the natural flavors of the animal whenever possible, and if you’ve gone through the trouble to hunt deer, bear or wild pig…why would you want it to taste like grocery store meat?

Here are a few game meat heart recipes to make the most of your hard work hunting.

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Deer Heart Steak ~ Marinated Grilled Venison Heart

Traditional Cooking Guides

Looking for more resources to cook and eat in a traditional way?

  • 10+ Venison Liver Recipes
  • 70+ Venison Recipes
  • 40+ Squirrel Recipes for Small Game Hunters
  • How to Make Apple Cider Vinegar
  • Beginner’s Guide to Cheesemaking

30+ Heart Recipes (Nose to Tail Cooking) (7)

Related

30+ Heart Recipes (Nose to Tail Cooking) (2024)

FAQs

How to cook food for 100 people? ›

  1. Keep the number of food varieties minimal.
  2. Focus on mathematical conversions. If you use 100 gms of oil to cook for 10 people, multiply it by 100 people. ...
  3. You need to hire big vessels based on your requir.
Mar 10, 2023

What's the best way to cook heart? ›

The heart is a tough muscle. To make it edible, you should either slow cook it as I do here or slice it into "steaks" and flash fry them. Some recipes instruct you to devein the heart, which is helpful when you flash-cook it. But slow cooking softens the tough parts, so trimming them is unnecessary.

How do you eat elk hearts? ›

How to cook elk heart: Heart can be cooked like any other wild game steak but if you're a little nervous about trying it, marinating it for tacos is a great way to go! I like to tenderize the meat before marinating to help the meat absorb the flavor.

What is cooking with heart? ›

“Cooking with heart” means you cooked it with your own liking or your own preference. The food that you prepared or cooked has a good result if you will put your own dedication, handwork, focus and heart even if you don't follow or memorize every step.

How do you cook for large amounts of people? ›

8 Tips For Cooking For Large Groups
  1. Keep things simple. ...
  2. Cook a crowd pleaser. ...
  3. Make something that's adaptable. ...
  4. Plan/Cook ahead. ...
  5. Invest in a slow cooker (or two) ...
  6. Make everyone your sous-chefs! ...
  7. Use a buffet approach. ...
  8. Finger food essentials.
May 24, 2019

Does heart meat taste good? ›

Beef hearts offer a robust beefy flavor comparable to that of a lean steak. You will not have to worry about any weird first bites or smells when first eating a beef heart. It has a slightly gamey taste much like venison. Oxhearts are significantly more mild than other organ meat cuts like beef liver or beef kidney.

Why does heart taste so good? ›

The heart is just another muscle, and heart is just another variety of muscle meat. Hear from any particular animal tastes basically like any other lean meat from that animal. So chicken heart is similar in taste to chicken breast, and beef heart tastes like a very lean roast.

Is heart a tough meat? ›

Beefy with a just slightly gamey flavor (think kidney, except much milder), the texture of heart is something akin to a poultry gizzard. The heart is also one of the more versatile types of offal; it's tough and low in fat but takes well to either quick cooking or long stewing.

Is eating elk heart healthy? ›

The fat content and composition of elk meat favor heart health. Elk, deer, bison, and pasture-fed cattle have lower fat contents in their meat and a healthier fat composition. Even after trimming all visible fat, beef from corn-fed animals has twice as much fat content as elk meat.

How to cook heart to home meals? ›

Our meals and hot dessert should be cooked from frozen either in a microwave or conventional oven. Most of our meals take just 8-12 minutes to cook in a microwave, or 35-40 minutes in the oven. Please check the label of the meal for exact cooking instructions. Our labels are clear and easy to follow.

Does heart taste like steak? ›

It doesn't have the strong flavor of liver, and tastes more like steak (a muscle) since the heart also is a muscle, but a different texture, more fine-grained. I usually cut it into small pieces for some sort of stir-fry.

What does cooked heart taste like? ›

Hearts are an excellent starting point if you want to get into offal. Once prepared, they look nothing like the original organ (well, the larger ones don't) and, generally, the taste of an animal's heart is akin to a mild version of the same animal's prime meat, with just a hint of iron.

How much food do I need to feed 100 guests? ›

How Much Food to Serve at a Party
FOODSERVE 25SERVE 100
Meats
Chicken or turkey breast8–9 pounds32–36 pounds
Fish (fillets or steaks)7-1/2 pounds30 pounds
Hamburgers6-1/2–9-1/2 pounds26–30 pounds
35 more rows
Apr 1, 2024

How many full trays of food do I need for 100 guests? ›

The number of full trays of food needed for 100 guests can vary depending on the type of food and serving style, but a rough estimate would be around 10-12 trays.

How much food do you need for a party of 100 people? ›

Each adult will consume 1 pound of food total; children, about 1/2 pound. The more options you have, the less you need of each; decrease the main course portion sizes by 1 to 2 ounces if served on a buffet. Guests will always eat — and drink — more at night than during the day.

How do you feed 100 guests on a budget? ›

Serving budget-friendly cuisines like salads, sandwiches and pasta dishes can be a very cost-effective choice. Or, if you're looking for a more casual option, how about a barbeque? Burgers, hot dogs and other grill-oriented foods are sure to be crowd favorites, and they won't rack up a big bill.

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