Try GOLD - Free
Pheasant Breasts With Moroccan Spiced Beans, Garlic And Tomatoes
The Upland Almanac
|Summer 2017
A few years back on a trip to Morocco, I was delighted to see pheasants and grouse still in feather, hanging on hooks in the medinas/markets ready to be sold.

Each bird had a tag on its leg with the stamp of the king – proof that they had been harvested legally with permission. Of course, thanks to Teddy Roosevelt and a committed band of conservationists, the United States banned market hunting at the turn of the last century and kept vast expanses of land open to public hunting. Something we should never take for granted.
The markets in Morocco are old-fashioned by American standards, a dazzling array of goods in small stalls packed together in a web of riotous color. The scene is loud and alive with commerce. We picked our way down narrow market paths and chose beautiful fresh vegetables and exotic smelling spices as we wandered.
A wonderful way to serve pheasant in the summer is with fresh beans, garlic and tomatoes. A simple but very aromatic Moroccan spice mixture called ras el hanout added to the pan will fill your kitchen with heady exotic aromas and add zest to both the beans and the bird. The mixture comes with a bit of a cachet as it can contain as many as 100 spices including the infamous Spanish Fly.
This story is from the Summer 2017 edition of The Upland Almanac.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac
Tailfeathers
After calmly sipping some bottled water, I leaned back in the passenger seat of Jon Osborn's pickup, calmly pressed a couple of buttons on my cell phone, and calmly awaited the loving voice of my one, true, loving lover.
4 mins
Summer 2025

The Upland Almanac
My Small World
The older I get, the smaller my world becomes.” My father used to say that, and though I thought I understood what he was saying, I was never positive until just recently; my world, too, has become smaller.
3 mins
Summer 2025

The Upland Almanac
SURVIVAL SENSE for UPLAND HUNTERS
Mention the word survival and many who engage in outdoor activities may conjure up images of a Rambo-type character wielding a machete-sized Bowie knife as he digs grubs out of a rotted log or a flock of reality TV contestants competing au naturel on a tropical island.
8 mins
Summer 2025
The Upland Almanac
FISHING: MYSTIQUES AND MISTAKES
Perhaps all you can say is that there are great lapses or discrepancies in time; that and the simple if inexplicable fact that some people have fishing in their hearts.
10 mins
Summer 2025

The Upland Almanac
Taking Chances Finding the Good in "Meh
Leaping from bed, running out the motel door and racing the crack of dawn, you rocket toward the storied covert recently profiled in a magazine story, only to find six other trucks parked, idling, awaiting the arrival of shooting hour.
8 mins
Summer 2025

The Upland Almanac
Walking with Grouse
Walleye and northern pike fishing and the possibility of photographing Ontario's abundant black bears drew me to Errington's Wilderness Resort.
2 mins
Summer 2025

The Upland Almanac
DOUBLES FOR DAKOTA
The two men that I shared a North Dakota goose blind with were both shooting 12-gauge semi-auto shotguns, but they admired my British 10-gauge double.
9 mins
Summer 2025

The Upland Almanac
Artistic License
\"In His Veins ... and His Art\"
4 mins
Summer 2025

The Upland Almanac
Upland Focus: ACRE BY ACRE, HOPE GROWS FOR ONE OF NEW JERSEY'S LAST WILD GAME BIRDS
Every day on the southern tip of New Jersey, a stream of trucks and cars lines up for passage on the Cape May-Lewes Ferry, which has been carting passengers across the Delaware Bay since the 1960s. Cape May has also been a rendezvous point for American woodcock since long before there was a ferry — or a city — at the spot.
6 mins
Summer 2025

The Upland Almanac
Classic Upland Guns
Lefever Arms Company, Part II
5 mins
Summer 2025
Translate
Change font size