- Location
- Western Manitoba
For many decades in Saskatchewan - deer hunting was in the cold - deer were brought into uninsulated garage when we got back in for the day - many times the deer legs were frozen - so more like "whittling" versus skinning - get the hide off - carcasses were hung overnight - usually frozen stiff by morning - is how they were cut up - sometimes a week later. Not certain that wild meat needs or benefits from hanging or aging like domestic beef does - I read somewhere there is an enzyme missing or not needed - and we had no choice but the carcasses were going to freeze solid - so no aging going to happen anyway. The meat probably thawed a bit while we were cutting - we did have heaters going to warm up the work space - after that CWD disease thing started, was all boned out - no more cutting across bones with band saw. And we found we do NOT like deer fat - goes like mutton and congeals in your mouth when eating it - so our pails of trimmed meat are very red - very lean meat. And we eventually learned how to "fillet" a deer - hanging carcass - all the meat stripped off - just the bones left hanging with the hide and head still attached. DNR wanted us to submit head as sample for CWD testing - never did explain how to remove that head from carcass without severing the spine - so did not happen much - modern stuff might know more, now - at the time (mid 1990's ?), Sask DNR publications said the CWD prion was found in clear fluids, like around the spinal cord, and up to that time, had never been found in blood or red meat..
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