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Quote from: Jonnyjammer on August 10, 2015, 02:32:15 PMQuote from: MR5x5 on August 10, 2015, 02:27:18 PMSuper general guidelines for meat in the field:Below 40 for two weeksBelow 50 for one weekbelow 65 for three daysthis would be good to know,can you give a source from where it came? From a Dwight Schuh article on meat care:"Once you get all body heat out of a carcass, air temperature is almost irrelevant. Commercial butchers age beef for up to two weeks at 40 degrees, and they quick-age beef for three days at 65 degrees. Guided by that continuum, I believe if you can cool meat to 65 degrees, you have roughly three days to get it into a cooler. If you can cool the meat to 40 degrees, you have up to two weeks."
Quote from: MR5x5 on August 10, 2015, 02:27:18 PMSuper general guidelines for meat in the field:Below 40 for two weeksBelow 50 for one weekbelow 65 for three daysthis would be good to know,can you give a source from where it came?
Super general guidelines for meat in the field:Below 40 for two weeksBelow 50 for one weekbelow 65 for three days
I forget exactly who told me of this but ultimately it came from a couple old timers that have been killing elk for years and years. These guys would cool their game in the creek until it became a light pink color and they swore that it is the best eating meat ever. It rinses a lot of the blood out of the meat and these guys swore by the way the burger and steaks come out doing it that way. I have never and probably will never try it but whoever it was telling me this did try it and said it was good but not enough to try it or I would probably remember who it was and probably of tried it!