Stewed Rabbit
Submitted by krisah
Slow-cooker rabbit stew braised low and slow with tomatoes, onion, rosemary, and dry white wine. Italian-style stewed rabbit that turns rich and fork-tender after 8 hours unattended.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
8 hrsREADY
8 hrsA simple slow-cooker preparation for rabbit that draws on Italian rural traditions, with tomatoes, onion, rosemary, and dry white wine doing all the seasoning. The 7-to-8-hour low-and-slow braise turns the lean, gamier rabbit meat into spoon-tender pieces in a tomato-wine sauce that’s deeply savory but not heavy.
Rabbit is leaner than chicken, which means it dries out fast in dry-heat cooking. The slow cooker is ideal because it surrounds the meat in moist heat for the entire cook, keeping every piece tender. The tomato sauce and wine bath also tenderize the meat through their acidity, breaking down the connective tissue without toughening the protein.
Rosemary is the right herb match for rabbit. Its piney, slightly resinous character cuts through the richness of the meat and pairs naturally with the tomato. Just a quarter teaspoon of ground rosemary is enough; more would dominate.
A full cup of dry white wine is generous and intentional. As it reduces over the long cook, it concentrates into a slightly tannic, fruity backbone that lifts the dish above ordinary tomato stew. A medium-bodied wine like Pinot Grigio or unoaked Chardonnay works well.
Serve over polenta, pappardelle, or with crusty bread to catch the sauce. The meat falls off the bones with a fork after the long cook.
The recipe note about substituting squirrel, woodchuck, or muskrat is a tip of the hat to traditional country cooking, where any small game in season would have been used in the same pot.
Pro Tips
- Pat the rabbit pieces dry and brown them in a hot skillet before adding to the slow cooker. The Maillard sear adds depth that cold-start cooking misses.
- Don’t add salt aggressively at the start. The tomato sauce already carries salt, and 8 hours of reduction concentrates it.
- Use bone-in rabbit for the richest sauce. The bones release collagen that gives the sauce body.
- Let the stew rest 15 minutes after cooking. The flavors integrate and the sauce thickens slightly as it cools.
Variations
- Add a few crushed garlic cloves and a bay leaf for more aromatic depth.
- Stir in a half cup of sliced mushrooms with the tomato for an earthier, fuller-bodied stew.
- Substitute red wine for the white for a darker, richer cacciatore-style version.
Ingredients
Directions
Salt and pepper rabbit pieces and place in removable liner.
Add other ingredients.
Place liner in base. Cover and cook on low 7 to 8 hours.
Note: Squirrel, woodchuck or muskrat may be substituted
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