Free: Contests & Raffles.
All of this talk is making me want to learn to cut my own..
Quote from: Elkrunner on August 11, 2011, 12:13:01 PMAll of this talk is making me want to learn to cut my own..It's not as hard as you think. Cut off the quarter and take a look at it. God put it together in chunks (muscle groups). Just start taking them apart by separating one muscle group from another and cutting them off the bone. If you want a roast, wrap the muscle group as one big chunk. If you want steaks, lay the muscle group on a cutting board and slice to desired thickness. All the "extra" slivers and chunks go into a bowl to be later ground into burger or packaged and frozen by the handful for stew meat or fajitas. Hand grinders are not expensive. Get some beef or pork fat (I like using bacon ends). Run it once through the grinder. Run your deer/elk meat once through the grinder. Mix them together in a bowl, then run it through the grinder 1 or two times together. Viola! Burger.Want breakfast sausage? Add some sausage spices to the bowl before you grind the meat and the fat together and mix real well. It's not a bad way to spend an afternoon...
Quote from: Elkrunner on August 11, 2011, 12:13:01 PMAll of this talk is making me want to learn to cut my own..It's not as hard as you think. Cut off the quarter and take a look at it. God put it together in chunks (muscle groups). Just start taking them apart by separating one muscle group from another and cutting them off the bone. If you want a roast, wrap the muscle group as one big chunk. If you want steaks, lay the muscle group on a cutting board and slice to desired thickness.
Quote from: Pathfinder101 on August 11, 2011, 12:58:17 PMQuote from: Elkrunner on August 11, 2011, 12:13:01 PMAll of this talk is making me want to learn to cut my own..It's not as hard as you think. Cut off the quarter and take a look at it. God put it together in chunks (muscle groups). Just start taking them apart by separating one muscle group from another and cutting them off the bone. If you want a roast, wrap the muscle group as one big chunk. If you want steaks, lay the muscle group on a cutting board and slice to desired thickness. And a lot of this doesn't necessarily require a knife even, depending on the condition - I've worked on some that were half froze Just use your fingers to separate the muscles, couple little cuts and you're golden.