collapse

Advertisement


Author Topic: Hanging Deer  (Read 8040 times)

Offline bow4elk

  • Pacific Northwest Bowhunting
  • Washington For Wildlife
  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Frontiersman
  • *****
  • Join Date: Nov 2007
  • Posts: 3413
  • Location: Olympia, WA
  • Contact me at: tom@pnwbowhunting.com
    • https://www.facebook.com/pacific.northwest.bowhunting/
    • Pacific Northwest Bowhunting
Re: Hanging Deer
« Reply #30 on: October 21, 2009, 08:17:56 PM »
I don't age my meat unless I have a walk-in cooler at my disposal.  Otherwise, I cool it as quickly as I can, then proceed butchering when I'm back home.  I keep the meat on ice in large coolers.  I cut and wrap my meat and it goes right into the freezer.  I've never had tough, chewy, or gamey tasting meat - including caribou, elk, antelope, deer, bear, etc.  Works for me.   Proper field care is essential in the end product, so hanging isn't as important, in my opinion.  Cooling the meat, keeping it free of hair and debris, and not running it through a bandsaw are of key importance.  Why anyone would want to drag bone and bone marrow through their meat is beyond me.  Beef fat adds flavor; wild game fat taints it.  I also remove all silverskin, sinew, and pretty much anything "white" off my cuts of meat.  Again, cooking game with fat left attached will taint the flavor.

My young daughters love wild game.  I was a proud dad the night my five year old said (with a mouth stuffed full of elk stroganoff), "Dad, I like to look at animals but they are more fun to eat!"  I couldn't have said it better.

Official Measurer: Pope and Young Club, NW Big Game Inc., National Muzzle Loading Rifle Association, Oregon Shed Hunters
First Hunt Foundation mentor
Washington State R3 Coordinator

Pacific Northwest Bowhunting http://www.pnwbowhunting.com

Offline Moosehunt

  • Trade Count: (+2)
  • Tracker
  • **
  • Join Date: Oct 2007
  • Posts: 98
Re: Hanging Deer
« Reply #31 on: October 21, 2009, 08:31:21 PM »
I have always been a proponent of aging meat when I take it out of the freezer, not before i put it in (leave it in the fridge for a day or two and let the enzymes in the blood start working)...unless it's larger game like moose.  There was a handbook written a few years back by the folks at WSU.  In it they described the aging process for various game animals.  If I recall, hanging deer sized game for long periods of time was not necessary.  As decribed earlier....proper field care, cooling and cutting is the key.  And I agree.....using a band saw to cut wild game does taint the meat.  I debone everything.  I also do not cut pieces into steak sized pieces etc until I pull out the package of meat to cook.   Reason being is that you are less apt to have freezer spoilage.  We wrap in plastic and then in freezer paper.  Never have any issues. 

 


* Advertisement

* Recent Topics

Willapa Hills 1 Bear by Alan K
[Today at 10:18:22 PM]


1993 Merc issues getting up on plane by addicted1
[Today at 09:02:37 PM]


Sockeye Numbers by Southpole
[Today at 09:02:04 PM]


In the background by NOCK NOCK
[Today at 08:55:59 PM]


A. Cole Lockback in AEB-L and Micarta by Boss .300 winmag
[Today at 07:59:50 PM]


3 pintails by Dan-o
[Today at 07:20:12 PM]


Selkirk bull moose. by moose40
[Today at 05:42:19 PM]


North Peninsula Salmon Fishing by Buckhunter24
[Today at 12:43:12 PM]


2025 Crab! by trophyhunt
[Today at 11:09:27 AM]


erronulvin trail cam photos by kodiak06
[Today at 10:19:35 AM]


Yard babies by Feathernfurr
[Today at 09:55:24 AM]

SimplePortal 2.3.7 © 2008-2025, SimplePortal