Omega
Well-Known Member
Yea, non of that, but have had an entire freezer go bad. Just taped it shut and took it to the landfill.Im envious of you for never having to experience a tough backstrap or having a vacuum seal bag leak.
Yea, non of that, but have had an entire freezer go bad. Just taped it shut and took it to the landfill.Im envious of you for never having to experience a tough backstrap or having a vacuum seal bag leak.
A really large bowl or plastic meat tub is handy too. You can get a meat tub for 12-15 bucks at bass pro or just use a big storage tote (one that fits under a bed). I've found this to be useful for me anyhow. Good luck!Next year my goal is to process my own deer. I have watched youtube videos and have read some on it but thought id ask here too. I really want to do it, just to learn. Not at all wanting to do it as a business. Just know the art and help out some neighbors along the way. I probably wouldn't do 4-5 deer per year, if that. I would honestly ground up most of it, other than the backstrap and tenderloin. My questions:
1. For that low of #s, what is the smallest size grinder you would buy?
2. I have a vacuum seal machine, so I wouldn't need that
3. For aging, I wouldn't want to buy a separate refrigerator, is using a cooler with ice ok? I know I would have to keep the meat from touching the melt and keep it drained well, and I do have a place I could hang one if the weather was cool enough.
4. What am I missing/ overthinking?
5. Am i out of mind? We also raise meat sheep so once I know how to process a deer, Id like to try one of them as well.
Are you freezing the meat and using a saw to get your steaks cut properly? Or just a sharp knife after aging?I normally decide during the processing on how I want to cook it, so can cut into steaks and not worry about it.
X2 on the kitchenaid attahcments. They work great!I bought the grinder attachment for my wife's KitchenAid mixer. It has worked fine for me for about 15 years now. At the most I was doing four or five deer a year, now I just do a couple but honestly, I think that would work fine for you.
The meat I wanted to grind I would just cut up into smaller cubes and run it thru the attachment.
ThisFreeze your grinder head before you start and every time you take a break to pack ground in bags. Chill your cubed meat almost to the point of freezing (starts to feel crunchy)- cold meat grinds much better. I usually run mine through twice- first a coarse then a medium plate
Just a sharp knife, before freezing. Only time I partially freeze is when I do jerky, my meat slicer works much better if the meat is slightly frozen, about the consistency of a cooked ham. I just use the same technic as when I filet fish, except I leave it much thicker, around 3/4"-1" Here is the knife I use to process, it was only $17.40 when I bought it now about $32. It usually remains pretty sharp throughout the entire deer and only touch up before the next one, sometime in the middle if I feel it dragging any.Are you freezing the meat and using a saw to get your steaks cut properly? Or just a sharp knife after aging?