In regards to the OPs missing tenderloin. About 40 years ago I had a neighbour that was a butcher at a local shop that did wild game in season, and they did a lot of it. I asked him one time if he hunted, he said no he did not have to. He pulled open his freezer and it was full, and I mean full of moose and deer, and all the best cuts too. He stated he takes a couple pieces from each animal he butchers and the average hunter never misses it as they loose more meat in trimming from bullet damage and poor field dressing than what he takes. He also stated that every butcher shop that does wild game takes a little bit here and there and that's the way it has always been and always will be.
A visit from a local CO would sure have his dander in a tiff.
No hunting licence nor cancelled species tag for all them different vittles in his freezer.
Hmmmmm........
I rubbed them in the Montreal spice my Dad taught me to make and fried them 2.5 minutes a side in butter, rested it 5 minutes and sliced into medallions. Everybody enjoyed them.
I will never go to Ennis Farms Meats again.
Hi guys. Just picked up my deer from the butcher.
At $0.85/lb, my 85 pound deer cost $90+GST. Ok, maybe there were some hidden fees or something.
I wound up with 55 lbs of frozen meat. And one tenderloin. I'll defrost that this weekend and see if two tenderloins are wrapped together. Looks thin.
It was thin. Only one tenderloin. Won't go there again. Everyone avoid Ennis Farms Meats in Langley.
So, does the price and final meat weight make sense?
Cheers,
D
OP, are you sure it didn't end up in a separate cut, like the t-bone chop?
If they ask, and it's all about how they ask.Yea kamlooky but the problem there is he would probably just claim they are gifts from people.
I absolutely despise cheats and cons. Funny thing is if a chap wanted meat he could just ask and id give some personally. In fact most hunters I know are like that, they all love to share their kill.
Karma is a ##### they will get bitten down the road somehow
I rubbed them in the Montreal spice my Dad taught me to make and fried them 2.5 minutes a side in butter, rested it 5 minutes and sliced into medallions. Everybody enjoyed them.
Hi guys. Just picked up my deer from the butcher.
At $0.85/lb, my 85 pound deer cost $90+GST. Ok, maybe there were some hidden fees or something.
I wound up with 55 lbs of frozen meat. And one tenderloin. I'll defrost that this weekend and see if two tenderloins are wrapped together. Looks thin.
It was thin. Only one tenderloin. Won't go there again.
So, does the price and final meat weight make sense?
Cheers,
D
Reason for Edit: I've long had a policy of not providing negative reviews, however justified. This episode made me mad enough to forget that.
OP, are you sure it didn't end up in a separate cut, like the t-bone chop?
That's why we started doing our own.
That's what I was thinking. See if you have any tbones, if you do that's where the other tenderloin went.
I have seen a lot of guys wreck the tenderloin well gutting deer.i have even seen them get ripped out with the guts ...Dutch