Search Site   
News Stories at a Glance
CGB breaks ground on Ports of Indiana expansion project
Ohio Farm Bureau hosts Ag events for kids in 4 counties
Solar grazing on the rise on Indiana farms
Late-season nitrogen may improve soybean meal used in livestock feed
Lack of broadband funds from BEAD could impact  Illinois farmers
New invasive Asian copperleaf weed detected in Illinois fields
Farmers need to understand farm water usage prior to data center talks
2026 World Pork Expo just around the corner at Iowa State Fairgrounds
Ohio Wine Producers Association launches Thyme for Wine Herb Trail experience
Mounted archery takes aim at Rising Glory Farm
Significant rain, coupled with cool weather, slows Midwest fieldwork
   
Archive
Search Archive  
   
Trader-turned-chef sets out to hunt her own food
Girl Hunter: Revolutionizing the Way We Eat, One Hunt at a Time by Georgia Pellegrini
c.2012, Da Capo LifeLong
$24/28 Canada
248 pages, includes index

Dinner last night was delicious. The salad was crispy and fresh, with all the right additions and your favorite dressing. There was the slightest tease of a comfort-food memory from the main dish, which was created with a mini-bite of spice nipping your tongue.
And the side dishes? You had seconds of those, followed by dessert that must’ve been made by angels.

So where did it all come from? To say “a restaurant” or “the grocery store” is cheating, especially after you’ve read Girl Hunter by Georgia Pellegrini.

One day not long ago, after looking up from the trading floor of a Wall Street firm and wondering how she got there, Georgia Pellegrini suddenly knew that a life in finance was not where she belonged. Determined to “nourish (her) soul again,” she set out to become a chef.

Still, there was something missing. She was working at a high-end restaurant, serving the same people she had formerly toiled beside, but pretension marred her job, presentation was more important than nutrition and food was being wasted.

Then the head chef gave her an “unusual order:” She was told to slaughter five turkeys for the evening’s dinner.

The experience opened her eyes to a part of her that she never knew existed, and sent her on a journey far away from the meat aisle in the grocery store.

“Is it possible to eat only the meat that you kill?” she asked.
Pellegrini’s first answer came in the Arkansas Delta where she joined silver-haired men at a hunting camp they called the Village. They were out for turkeys then, and after a quick tutorial on guns, Pellegrini bagged two gobblers with one shot.

Later, she hunted there for doves, deer and wild boar.
In Texas, she shot a javelina, then had to explain to airport security why she was toting “frozen animal parts” in her luggage.
She hunted for grouse in Montana, and spent an edgy week with a rancher in Wyoming who wasn’t who he said he was.
She missed “harvesting” axis deer in Texas and traveled to England for a “social hunt,” to New Orleans for ducks and to upstate New York to hunt squirrel.

“I … have looked my food in the eye and made a choice,” says Pellegrini. “It was all amazing.”

Think life’s best spent gun-toting in wilds, woods or weeds? Then you’re going to love this thoughtful, meaningful, surprisingly gentle book. With a poet’s eye toward a conscious dinner, author Georgia Pellegrini takes her readers on a search not just for wild game, but for what she calls a “primal part” of one’s being.

I couldn’t stop reading as Pellegrini dug into this foray with gusto and blood, which gives her book an occasional Lord of the Flies feel that’s almost always abutted by thoughts so beautiful that you almost want to weep.

Because of that, and because of the easy-to-follow gourmet recipes included, this memoir will firmly ensnare hunters and eaters alike. If that describes you, then, Girl Hunter is a book to shoot for.

Terri Schlichenmeyer has been reading since she was three years old and never goes anywhere without a book. She lives on a hill in Wisconsin with two dogs and 11,000 books.

Readers with questions or comments may write to Terri in care of this publication.
2/8/2012