Cutting your own game. Any tips/tricks

No need to even cut an animal in half. All the parts come off quite nicely with a knife...unless you want ribs that is.

Exactly. The main tool I use in butchering is a little 4 inch Rapala filleting knife and I typically only use the first 2 inches of it. You simply find where the muscles originate on the bone and "tease" them out by using the tip. I keep a big Henckel chef's knife to the side the square off the cuts after they come off. I take of the front legs first and bone them out on the table. Everything else comes off of the still hanging carcass. I take the neck meat off first and then remove the muscle groups from the hind legs and then take out the back straps. All that is left hanging is the skeleton with the rear shanks and tendons left. I have a hook that I put in the pelvis to hang the deer while I take off the remaining pieces of meat from the shanks.

I did 8 of 9 deer that way this year. By the last one I was skinning and deboning an entire deer in just under an hour. Add in the other half hour it took the wife to vac pac and label everything and it is not a daunting job at all but something you can get done after work and before supper (which should be a couple of the choice cuts from your deer).

The last deer was a buck fawn with meat the same color as pork. We cut him fresh, took the ribs, got the shanks with the bone in and then cut up the rest of the bones. Roasted the bones for 6 hours, got three big stock pots going and then reduced the three pots into a half pot of syrupy deer goodness. Sear a deer steak off and then add a bit of red wine and deer syrup to the pan and you got a perfect sauce for your meat.
 
We do basically the same but I remove the rear legs from the carcass too and debone them on the butchering table. I just find them easier to work on on the table. I do all my deboning with a 3 1/2" folding knife and then cut my steaks and roasts and do my trimming with a regular sized filleting knife.

We had a busy year.....6 mule deer, two whitetails, a moose, an elk and a black bear. A saw was never used.
 
As others have said, have a couple really sharp knifes around. I have an 8" boning knife and a 12" cutting knife.

A couple other things, make sure you cut your backstraps and tenderloins as butter fly and try to make the cuts as even as possible. I cut mine in 3/4" as I like a rare to med rare cooked cut. Bone out the neck and if you like a good slow cooked roast, the neck is pretty good. If not then grind away.

If you do make jerky out of your grind, seperate it from the rest of your grind and do not add as much fat. We smoke ours and with too much fat we found the oil was absorbing the smoke and putting an acidic tatse into the jerky. We usually use 20-25% pork fat in our ground and 5% in our jerky. Play with this and find what you like.

It also helps a lot if you have a spouse/partner/friend that likes to get their hands dirty and help out. Wrapping 50+ lbs of ground can get pretty menotenous.

We just picked up an 11 lbs verticle stuffer and it has been our best purchase when it comes to doing our own sausages and pepperoni. makes it pertty easy and fast to stuff casings.

Cheers

SS
 
Theyre the outdoor edge videos, I have the big game quartering and deboning and sausage and jerky making but they arnt as informative.
 
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