There are 9 species of grouse native to the US.
I’ve eaten them all.
Since I like light meat and dark meat, I rate blues and sharp tails approximately equivalently.
Blues, get the slight edge over a ruffed grouse because they’re bigger. Meat’s about the same though.
Of the sharptails, of which there are six sub species, the Columbia’s (west slope) are probably the best. Though the plains variety is pretty good too. Rule of thumb is just cooked them like a piece of steak, get the grill super hot, oil them, lay them on the grate for 1 minute, and flip. and when a little bit of blood starts coming out the top they are done. You can cook them on the tailgate in less than two minutes.
Like any bird that flies a lot, the dark meat gets an irony flavor if you overcook it. Liver if you will. Don’t do that.
As you move down through the ranks, sooner or later, you hit end of season male Spruce grouse and bomber Sage grouse.
The ptarmigan and the prairie chickens are all dark and are in the middle. Though I have to say I killed a buck greater one time and it was the darkest meat I’ve ever seen in my life. Almost black. Very strong.
Potted some Sprucies that had been on needles in a drought year that about got me kicked out of the cabin.
Last edited by ClapperZapper; 01/28/26 04:20 PM.