deer guts

My buddy's dog is getting 260lbs of moose bone and the junk we trimmed off while cutting it up. He's gonna freeze it and feed him all winter. His wife is concerned about flying moose ribs the first time they mow the lawn though!
 
Bones any good for dogs?

I use the tongue for wiping hair off the meat, works great, wouldn’t bother eating one unless it was from a larger animal.
 
Thanks everyone. I had not even thought of the heart and tongue. The lungs were the big one I was thinking about.

Someone had a valid point about parasites. If I dehydrate the freeze the organs would that kill any risk of parasites?

I stick them in the deep freeze for a week or so before making them into treats. Should kill the critters and half frozen also makes cutting into slices easier. Sometimes I will dehydrate strips, most of the time it get ground up with any leftovers from making sausage and stuffed, smoked, and dried. The dog goes right crazy for them.
 
Birds took care of the gut pile from a buck in less than 4 hours last winter, right in the middle of a field the only thing left was a blood stain in the snow, usually eat deer heart, elk heart and liver and tongue, moose heart and kidneys and tongue and the nose, nothing beats nose.
 
I always save the heart, even if it just goes into the grinder with the rest.

That extra lean ground beef that costs a bunch at the store? Beef hearts. Easy to trim off a wee bit of extra fat and the through the grinder it goes, otherwise they can hardly give them away.

Venison is pretty lean to begin with, and heart muscle is fairly tough, but too good to waste! I have used strip cut into leech shape as fish bait for walleye fishing too. Tough as old boots when raw.

Lungs, liver, etc., are the "Humbles". If you ever heard the expression "To be eating Humble Pie", that is what it was based upon. Not the most desired stuff, but it won't hurt anyone. I figure the crows and ravens gotta eat too. In Northern Alberta, they were often hanging around in the trees watching the whole show as we gutted, waiting on a hot meal, but I have seen a gut pile that I left out at night, completely cleaned up after it had frozen solid at 20 below. Pretty impressive clean up crew. All there was left was the gut contents, and a stain on the snow.

Some folks like the live, others not so much. I am in that latter category, don't usually carry Liver home unless I have a specific request for some. Always worth having a look at it for spots and lumps, to see if it looks generally healthy, other than the bullet holes anyways! :)


Cheers
Trev
 
Hearts and livers always come home with me too. I slice up raw and vac pack in 1lb bags. I thaw and cook for the dog. He gets some sort of meat once a day. Also do the same thing with all deer trimmings when I butcher our deer. I've got a happy dog with a nice shiny coat
 
Wife made the best ####ing pâté I've ever eaten, tipped off with home pickled beans. Needless to say it didn't last very long

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I guess most people don't know how easy making pâté is

just fry the thinly sliced liver in a pan with rather more oil than less (fat, coconut oil, tallow...)
run some spices (either rosemary or thyme), salt and pepper through the blender
add the oil from the pan in the blender and then blend the liver to a paste

that's it!
 
I am planning to deer hunt for the first time this fall.

I got thinking today about the gut pile. Nobody in my house will eat the liver or kidneys so they would end up staying in the field. I had a thought today that I could keep the liver and kidneys, slice them up and dehydrate them and feed them as treats to my dog. Can I do the same to the lungs? If they aren't liquid after being shot. Any other organs I can do this with?

Just trying to use as much as possible.

This is all assuming I shoot one first year out....

thanks
Jon

A deer in hand is more than three in the bush.
Get one on the ground first then worry about the organ meats.
That or stay home and continue to fret over what ifs.
Rob
 
Yeah, as far as dog treats go, around here it's the rib bones. MUCH happiness from the fur-kids!

Leg bones get zipped in half for winter treats, about all I really need to dispose of is the spine.

But then, dogs will go face down into the cat litter box, like a fat kid on a bowl of ice cream. The are not very hard to please! :)

Cheers
Trev
 
i don't eat trimmings either, but each to his own. we grew up eating wild meat and i don't care if i ever saw another pile of innards.
 
Liver. If it looks good, I take it home and slice it thin and dehydrate it for dog treats. It gets frozen after dehydration, and it takes a long time to dehydrate compared to regular meat. last batch took 8 hours in the dehydrator.

little dogs really like it, but its very rich so they get limited amounts.
 
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