Dove and Pigeon Recipes

Doves and pigeons (squab when you buy them in a store) deserve their own category because they are dark meat birds with very little fat on them. You can use small ducks such as bufflehead or teal with these recipes, but they will often have a layer of fat that a pigeon or dove will not. A sharp-tailed grouse is an excellent alternative, though.

If you catch your own doves and pigeons, please – please – pluck them and keep them whole. They are the easiest birds to pluck, taking only seconds, once you get the hang of it. You get inreturn for your efforts a beautiful presentation and those little legs, which are so very tasty! Remove the wings from a dove (you can throw them into the stockpot, however) andall but the first wing joint on a pigeon (this is the “drumette” piece).

Plucking Doves and Pigeons

Here are step-by-step instructions on plucking game birds, including doves and pigeons. When you are done plucking and gutting, save the livers for a ravioli recipe.

One dove is a good portion for an appetizer, three to four for a main course. Pigeons are larger, so one pigeon makes a light dinner main course — two is a bit much because the meat is so dense. Squabs are the same as pigeons: One to two per person.

GRILLED

Grilling is by far the best way to cook doves. It’s the only way to get the skin crispy without overcooking the breast meat, which should be eaten medium, i.e., still pink. Same goes for young pigeons. Older pigeons are better braised.

Grilled Doves a La Mancha

By far my favorite recipe for grilled doves.Stuffed with fresh herbs, painted with bacon fat and dusted with smoked paprika.

Huckleberry Grilled Doves

Doves basted with a huckleberry (or blueberry) BBQ sauce, then grilled until they are medium-rare. Serve it with grilled potatoes and a salad.

Grilled Doves Desert Style

Doves grilled with a BBQ sauce made from wild prickly pears, tequila, agave nectar and chiles.

Cajun Grilled Doves

Doves rubbed with Cajun seasonings and grilled hot and fast.

Grilled Doves Florentine

In Italy, steak is grilled over a hardwood fire and dressed only with salt, a little black pepper and a squeeze of lemon. Doves are just as good cooked this simply.

Grilled Doves Teriyaki

Who doesn’t love teriyaki? In my version you make your own teriyaki sauce, which is a little less sweet and gloppy than the store-bought versions.

Doves on the Feed

Grilled dovesor squab with barley or farro risotto and porcini mushrooms.

Here is another grilled dove recipe I wrote for my friend David Leite on his website: Grilled Doves, Portuguese Style.

ROASTED

When the weather cools, roasting is your next best bet for doves and pigeons. Get your oven hot for this one...

Roast Pigeon with Green Sauce

The English eat a lot of pigeons, and this is a British style recipe for roasted pigeon with a pretty green parsley sauce.

Turkish Roast Pigeon with Bulgur

Pigeons are also eaten a lot in the Middle East, so here is a Turkish roast pigeon, stuffed with bulgur wheat.

OTHER DOVE AND PIGEON RECIPES

Here are some other ways to cook doves and pigeons.

Poached Dove with Roasted Peppers

Gently poached skinless dove breasts, tossed into a Spanish-inspired main course salad with roasted red peppers, preserved garlic and pine nuts.

Tortelli of Pigeon

Braised pigeon, squab or dove, ground into a rich ravioli filling. A tortelli is a large tortellini.

Deep-Fried Doves Middle Eastern Style

Doves, dusted with Middle Eastern spices, and deep fried. Oh yeah, it’s awesome.

Fried Doves with a Sunflower Crust

Doves eat sunflowers, right? So a sunflower seed crust is the perfect coating for fried doves.

Dove Roulade with Saffron-Corn Sauce

A fancy recipe for doves. This is a date-night dish.

Doves on Toast

Serving small game birds on toast is an old tradition; the toast sops up the gravy. In this version, the doves are servedwith quail eggs, maple-brandy gravy and mint gremolata.

More Wild Game Recipes