@ Shooter - for someone who started this thread, we have still not seen/ read about any gems from your kitchen!

How about you make up for lost opportunities by treating us to an authentic khud khargosh & santh recipe?!
Meanwhile this is a rough recipe for khud khargosh (wild hare baked in a bed of coals) as told to me over a few drinks by an acquaintance, who had the benefit of growing up in more blissful times. Putting it down as best I can recall, quantities mentioned are my own guesswork...
Hare should be skinned, insides, paws, & head removed. Keep rest of carcass intact.
First the stuffing (mutton mince):
1/2 Kg mutton mince
200 gm - potatoes - peeled & chopped into cubes
100 gm - Ghee
2 onions chopped fine
1/2 cup - curd/ yoghurt
2 tablespoons - ginger garlic paste
4 tsp - coriander powder
1 tsp - red chilli powder
1/2 tsp - turmeric powder
3 - green chillies -chopped fine (remove seeds if possible)
1 tablespoon - lemon juice
Salt to taste - 1 tsp should suit most
Take the yoghurt, ginger-garlic paste, coriander powder, red chilli powder, turmeric, salt and the mince.
Fry the chopped onions on low flame till they brown
Add the mince+spice mixture made above and continue frying for 5 mins
Take off the flame and add the potatoes & lemon juice - mix in well and keep aside for stuffing later. It is only semi-cooked as it will continue to cook once stuffed inside the hare. DONT discard the excess ghee!
Now the marinade for the hare
1 tablespoon garlic paste
100 grams ghee
1 tsp salt
1 tsp red chilli powder (vary to taste - but keep in mind we will be rubbing in another tsp of chilli separately)
1 tsp coriander powder
1/2 tsp black cumin powder (shahi jeera)
1/2 tsp cumin powder (preferably made after first roasting cumin seeds and then grinding them)
2 cloves + 1/2 a stick of cinnamon + seeds from 2 cardamoms - roast slightly and grind to powder
1/2 tsp turmeric
1 cup of yogurt - hung till it is nice & creamy
2 tbsp of kachri powder (if available) - else substitute with a couple of tablespoons of lemon juice
Blend all of the above till it becomes a paste of even consistency - keep aside for later.
Now mix together 1 tsp salt and 1 tsp red chilli powder
Poke the hare carcass all over with a sharp fork so that spices are able to permeate deep into the meat (if it's been shot, try and remove all of the lead unless of course you are secretly employed by a dentist and are looking to send him business

).
Now rub the salt+chilli mix all over the outside of hare, allowing it to absorb all of it.
Now coat the outside & inside of the hare evenly with the marinade paste
Stuff the abdomen with the mince made earlier
Now wrap the hare with half cooked rotis/ chappatis all and tie them together with a string (else you'll have a hard time keeping them from falling off). 6-8 rotis should be enough to cover the entire hare.
Wrap banana leaves around the rotis (cover them completely) and wrap a muslin cloth around the banana leaves
Coat the entire preparation with a generous amount of wet clay or multani mitti
Now you can either bury it in a firepit full of hot coals (it must be completely covered with the coals) OR heat your oven to 200 deg C and put it in for a couple of hours.
Take out and keep aside for 20 minutes before cracking open the clay and removing the dish from within.
The rotis that were used would have absorbed all the flavour of the meat & spices and can be enjoyed by themselves or eaten with the dish.
Once again, do keep in mind that the above involves a fair amount of fill in the spaces/ guesswork on my part as I am not going to have a chance to try cooking it in India! If you do get around to taking a stab at it, please do share your experience/ feedback.
Cheers!
Abhijeet