I’d have to try one cooked right before I’d be convinced to raise them myself.
Any suggestions on recipes?
Recipes for German peppered hare (hasenpfeffer) abound on the interwebs.
It doesn't take a lot of skill to cook young rabbit "right." They're perfectly tender for frying as well. I prefer to filet the tenderloin out, only about an extra 2 or 3 minutes of butcher time per rabbit.
Old rabbits need to go in the Instant Pot, about 20 minutes per pound of meat, or 5 or 6 hours on the stove, simmering. For a simple stew, about 1 c of flour per rabbit, add some S&P to the flour, dredge the rabbit in it, then brown in bacon grease or tallow. When all the rabbit is browned, cover them in beef broth, simmer for about 3 hours or so. Dice up a couple pounds of carrots, toss them in, simmer another 90 minutes. Dice up a couple pounds of potatoes, cut an onion into eighths along the center axis, toss them and taters in the pot for another 90 minutes or so, salt and pepper to taste. Really hard to mess that up.
As "livestock" goes, they're about as low maintenance as you can get. If you're going to put them in hutches, empty the poop trays every 3 or 4 days. The poop doesn't smell, but the urine does. Check their ears on the regular to make sure they don't have ear mites. Breed the does every 9 weeks or so, butcher the kits when they're 4 months old.
The manure doesn't need to be aged before it goes in the garden. Just dump it in the garden, then hoe it in.
Rabbits aren't as efficient at converting feed to meat as chickens, but well more so that sheep, goats, hogs, or cattle. Feed these days is running about 50 cents/lb.