Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: Bango skank on January 08, 2020, 08:43:29 PMQuote from: Sitka_Blacktail on January 08, 2020, 08:41:02 PMLeave the ribs? No way. These were the hit of the party up in Alaska one winter. Soaked in Yoshida's overnight then slow cooked all day. Oh yah, we keep the hearts and livers too. These are all from a big group hunt. 5 deer limit. Oh and if you leave the ribs in the woods up in Alaska, if you are caught, you will get a wanton waste ticket.Yeah, hit of the party. Ive been to parts of alaska where fermented whale fat is a delicacy. Muktuk. No joke. They eat rotten whale fat in alaska. So saying people love it in alaska isnt saying much.Also, the first pic looks like theyre soaking in about 5 gallons of HFCS. That will make anything edible to a majority of americans with how screwed up their taste buds are from that crap. Soak a coyotes butthole in a teriyaki bath for a few days and the fast food scarfing junk food junkies will love it. Hell, ever been to a diner in new england? People think scrapple is great. If youre not familiar, scrapple is basically all the foul garbage they put in the cheapest hot dogs, but instead of grinding it to an unidentifiable paste, its left in large, almost identifiable chunks, and fried in lard. Funny..... No muktuk here. No stinky flipper or stink eggs either.But maybe some King Crab, corned moose brisket, home made lox, Swedish moose meatballs, blueberry gravlax, pickled salmon, the list goes on and on. Yah we have it bad up there having to stoop to eating deer ribs. lol You must visit the wrong villages.
Quote from: Sitka_Blacktail on January 08, 2020, 08:41:02 PMLeave the ribs? No way. These were the hit of the party up in Alaska one winter. Soaked in Yoshida's overnight then slow cooked all day. Oh yah, we keep the hearts and livers too. These are all from a big group hunt. 5 deer limit. Oh and if you leave the ribs in the woods up in Alaska, if you are caught, you will get a wanton waste ticket.Yeah, hit of the party. Ive been to parts of alaska where fermented whale fat is a delicacy. Muktuk. No joke. They eat rotten whale fat in alaska. So saying people love it in alaska isnt saying much.Also, the first pic looks like theyre soaking in about 5 gallons of HFCS. That will make anything edible to a majority of americans with how screwed up their taste buds are from that crap. Soak a coyotes butthole in a teriyaki bath for a few days and the fast food scarfing junk food junkies will love it. Hell, ever been to a diner in new england? People think scrapple is great. If youre not familiar, scrapple is basically all the foul garbage they put in the cheapest hot dogs, but instead of grinding it to an unidentifiable paste, its left in large, almost identifiable chunks, and fried in lard.
Leave the ribs? No way. These were the hit of the party up in Alaska one winter. Soaked in Yoshida's overnight then slow cooked all day. Oh yah, we keep the hearts and livers too. These are all from a big group hunt. 5 deer limit. Oh and if you leave the ribs in the woods up in Alaska, if you are caught, you will get a wanton waste ticket.
Also I am really glad to see this thread go the way it has. So many other threads have rude and unnecessary bashing, but threads like this one are exactly why I came back to hunt WA. Keep up the support everyone! Make hunt-wa great again!
I saved a rack or two of bone in ribs to try this year. I’m eager to try it out. It’s a pain but I spend the ten or fifteen minutes to get most of it.
I always just throw then in with the trim meat. I never thought about removing the fatty sections but then again they tend to be very thin strips that I bone out from the ribs with a fillet knife. After I did it a few times it goes really quick and have not experienced any bad taste in the burgers. To each his own wouldn't fault someone for leaving it. I just like to get as much as possible because can only get one deer in this state and myself and my family love venison.
Quote from: WSU on January 09, 2020, 08:22:08 AMI saved a rack or two of bone in ribs to try this year. I’m eager to try it out. It’s a pain but I spend the ten or fifteen minutes to get most of it.I guess I don't get this. It is way easier to leave the ribs in then to bone out the rib meat. may not be very professional but I use pruning shears to cut trough the ribs. and like I said I leave as much of the side meat on the ribs as possible. Two ribs and the attached meat get cut together and then sheared into two pieces so every two ribs end up as two portions. Less so for an old deer where you need to trim off side meat to remove fat.
Quote from: OutHouse on January 09, 2020, 09:19:08 AMI always just throw then in with the trim meat. I never thought about removing the fatty sections but then again they tend to be very thin strips that I bone out from the ribs with a fillet knife. After I did it a few times it goes really quick and have not experienced any bad taste in the burgers. To each his own wouldn't fault someone for leaving it. I just like to get as much as possible because can only get one deer in this state and myself and my family love venison.Hell, get the family out hunting too. More tags, more venison.