Reading this thread and seeing how many people seemingly don't like deer meat... It really makes me wonder... why?
There's gotta be something fundamentally different in order to result in some people loving it and others not liking it much.
But where does that difference lie?
People say that it is a combination of factors; the animal's diet, the age of the animal, the way it died, how quickly it was gutted and skinned, how it is processed, and how it is cooked...
I'm not really sold on the whole diet and age thing; I've eaten old bush bucks that tasted just as good as alfalfa-eating spikers. So that leaves gutting, skinning, processing and cooking.
I gut a deer pretty-much within minutes after it dies. Then I take it home and skin it and leave it hang in the shed for a day or 3, depending on temp. I butcher it myself, trim religiously, and vacuum-pack before freezing. I don't think there's a whole lot of magic here.
That brings us to cooking. There's one thing I do know about deer meat; cooking it requires one to abandon much of what they know about cooking meat. It can become dry and tough in about 1/2 the time it takes to cook beef to medium. Deer steaks are best just a touch past blue rare. Roasts are best between rare and medium rare. Stew meat and ground can be used pretty-much like their domestic counterparts, though.
In my world, deer is some of the most tender, flavourful meat I have ever eaten. It knocks the socks off your average Kirkland ribeye or pork chop. This isn't wishful thinking, it is exactly what myself, my family, and many friends experience when we eat mule deer roasts and steaks.
I don't even know what the word "gamey" means. I think it is something that people just imagine.