Time for a good electric grinder and stuffer. Making fresh and cured sausage is one of the most rewarding hunting- related activities you can undertake.
I really need to do this.
I like sausage that actually tastes like meat.
This is why I don"t make sausage. I like to eat deer meat, not pork fat and spices.
There must be a way to make deer sausage that tastes like deer.
I do agree with you, however. In fact the only sausage I had made this year was with bear meat. The tougher cuts of deer got ground - love that in burgers and bolognese!
After trying the bear meat as a roast, and then trying the salty sausage, I immediately regretted getting so much sausage made. The smokies aren't too bad, but the Brats are over-the-top salty. Still haven't picked up the Euro Wieners - hope they aren't too salty as well...
Been really enjoying the rendered bear lard on my English muffins with over-easy eggs these past few weeks.![]()
I really need to do this. All I need is the stuffer. My grinder has stuffer tubes but I have heard a good stuffer is the way to go.
I've never been really blown away by any of the sausage I have had made locally. It all ends up far too salty for my taste. Some of the bear sausage that I just got done locally is salty enough that I don't need to add any salt when I make big pots of soup/stew with it. The salt in the sausage is more than enough to salt the entire batch.
I like sausage that actually tastes like meat.
It takes an hour to de-bone a deer. I can cut and wrap it faster than when I use the band-saw. I make jerky and sausage in the new year when I have more time and all the animals in the freezer.
It takes an hour to de-bone a deer. I can cut and wrap it faster than when I use the band-saw. I make jerky and sausage in the new year when I have more time and all the animals in the freezer.
I was a retail meat cutter for over 20yrs. When I do deer or moose, I fillet the whole animal removing all bone and fat. The lack of fat and bone dust is a great way to improve the taste esp for deer. Takes a bit of time to do it this way but it's worth it later when it goes on the plate.
This. I am a merciless trimmer. Silver skin, fat and all bone goes away. It's the only way to fly.
This. ^^^^
The exception being the shank. We used to not bother with it, but knowledge is wonderful...after about 8 hour the tendons and sinew cook down into gelatin. Makes great stew meat.
I was almost 19 before I saw a 'deer steak / chop' that had a bone in it. The old Square Head driller just ran them through the bandsaw..."ummm, no I'm not really hungry anymore...Good, thanks..."




























