Yeah I use the applecore method.
Untill I tried one of these....
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Its handier than a pocket in your underwear!
I can do it better and almost as fast as any of the "buttholers" out there.highlight=moose[/url]
Brisket meat, from beef or moose, is about the most flavourful of any cut. Proper cooking makes it a choice piece of meat, in my opinion. Bush Indians think the same as I do, and they had a special way of removing the brisket when they were dressing the animal.
Certainly, a saw or axe is required to split the brisket as we dress the animal. Northern Indians have a unique way of removing the brisket, using only their knife. They take it out in one piece, by making it a wedge shape, cutting the ribs off of the brisket bone, on an angle.
The brisket is also one of their choice cuts of meat on the animal. They slow roast (barbicue) the entire piece over coals. DElicious.
It's interesting to see the different points of view. When I was doing our version of hunter's ed in the UK, we were told to make the smallest incision we could in the feild to get the stomach and guts out, squeeze the crap back towards the anus and tie a knot in the colon to stop the crap getting back in. We were told that anything more would open the carcass up to contamination, esp if it was to be dragged. Over here I've seen folks open the sternum and pelvis in the feild and then transport them.
I still just take out the stomach and guts, except for a antlerless muley this year that I had to carry out of the coulees. I took it's head off, legs at the knees and split the strenum to get the heart/lungs out.
I did find that hanging time dries exposed meat in this climate, so any cutting will make that worse.
Brisket meat, from beef or moose, is about the most flavourful of any cut. Proper cooking makes it a choice piece of meat, in my opinion. Bush Indians think the same as I do, and they had a special way of removing the brisket when they were dressing the animal.
Certainly, a saw or axe is required to split the brisket as we dress the animal. Northern Indians have a unique way of removing the brisket, using only their knife. They take it out in one piece, by making it a wedge shape, cutting the ribs off of the brisket bone, on an angle.
The brisket is also one of their choice cuts of meat on the animal. They slow roast (barbicue) the entire piece over coals. DElicious.
I split using the apparently barbaric method of carefully tapping my knife through with my small hatchet. Don't know why, I just do. The meat tastes pretty much the same.
My cousin was charged with leaving game to spoil for doing that. He would take the neck as far back as he could. Then the backstraps and drumsticks. The CO was of the opinion that there is sufficient meat in the ribcage of a mulie to justify harvesting it. Maybe he left too much meat on the outside of the ribcage or didn't take the tenderloins.I mostly use the gutless method, so the hams come off.



























