Messy kill- contaminated body cavity

Steve07

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Drumheller, AB
So- my killing shot on today's mulie took out everything in its path including rumen and intestines. There was feces of all various stages of manufacture throughout the inside while I was field-dressing. I got it cleaned out, and hung it up and washed it down thoroughly with chlorinated water. It drained fine, and seems clear and drying now. Just smells like the inside of a dead deer now. Is it dog-food, or does it matter? Mulies around here are tough enough to stomach without doing this kind of thing to them :rolleyes: . Wondering if it is safe to eat...
 
I tend to wash all my meat out, then dry it.
I have shot some that busted evrything, last year's mule deer tumbled down a cliff as well as having evrythiing shot up!!:eek:
Dragged him into the water for a bit, and it was fantastic!:dancingbanana:
Cat
 
I'd eat it. Done it many times before. But I would not let it hang for very long as that will cause anything that is left behind to grow...
 
You don't want it hanging around in the heat where the bacteria can get going, or next to someone elses meet.

I gut bagged a deer once with a soft lead 12 gauge slug. What a mess! Out of desperation tossed the carcass in the ocean and swished it about. I believe the salt and the fast cooling really saved that meat. It was excellent. Off course not everyone has an ocean nearby.
 
Hanging in the heat isn't going to be problem in Alberta right now. I've blown one through the guts before and my first field dressing was a nightmare of ruptured rumen and intestines. In both cases I scrubbed the deer out with snow and then at home washed the inside very well with lukewarm water before drying completely with a roll of paper towels. Both deer were excellent eaters. Both were shot in sub zero weather though and cooled quickly.
 
I butcher all my game myself. Best thing is to (in your case, as well as any other) is to clean it promtly, hang it & them trim off all the dryed skin on it before cuting. I also de-bone & de-fat everything. The meat tastes better & no gamey taste.
 
I agree with the triming of all the silver skin especially when the stomach and /or intestines are ruptured. A deer has the meat wrapped in this tissue and the chances that any contamination actually contacted the meat are very minor.
Also the problems of e coli in beef are largely a result of the feed lot environment they are exposed to unlike a deer which is naturally cleaner because of his environment.

My son managed to paunch a couple mulies last weekend due to the body position at the moment of the shots.. We rinsed them with water , cooled quickly and cut them today . No noticeable odour or other sign of trouble.
 
i use vinigar and water

i use a mixture of white vinigar and water, and wash the animal several times with it .i then rinse the animal with warm water, several times,hang for a couple of weeks and cut and wrap, i do this for all animals regardless of where they were hit, wife says it cuts down on the wild smell when your cooking it ( by the way wild smell is undetected by myself, just wife and some guests ).
hope this helps.................The Widow Maker
 
We had a deer last year that we could not find untill the next morning. Went down and died almost immediatley. It went down in some water. When we found it the next day and dressed it and skinned it, the meat was green.
We did not touch the meat.
 
Chung66 said:
We had a deer last year that we could not find untill the next morning. Went down and died almost immediatley. It went down in some water. When we found it the next day and dressed it and skinned it, the meat was green.
We did not touch the meat.

I would not have eaten that one either.....different story though.....
 
Dress it, wash it, dry it, hang it. Carry on with normal how to. :D
field-of-red-poppies_13300.jpg
 
Take note of Myth#4. I would just wipe it down with a cloth!


Ten Venison Myths



1, Hang venison for 5 days
Deer shouldn’t be hung at all, because life begins at 40. At 40 degrees bacteria come alive and usually, if a deer is hung in a garage all day long. It will be above 40degrees. The fat turns rancid and the meat begins to rot. To tenderize deer, leave it in the freezer for a few months. Butcher right away, freeze fresh. That’s the best way.

2 Leave the fat on for moisture and flavor
If you’ve hung the deer the fat will be partially rancid. Venison fat is strong (except over the front shoulders where it tastes like lamb fat) and it’s like tallow when it cools down. Trim the fat off, all or it and cook the meat lightly to retain moisture. Venison fat is the gamey part.

3 Make burger from shanks and scraps
Shanks and scraps are fine if all the fat and connective tissue are trimmed away. Most hunters and butchers don’t take the time to do it. Commercial grinders can slice the sinews and connective tissues into small pieces, but that’s where the off taste is concentrated. Trim your meat scraps then make burger, all the difference in the world.

4 Hose out the deer with water after field dressing
Three things work to ruin deer meat, dirt, heat and moisture. One minute after the inside of a deer is wiped down with a cloth, a thin dry film forms that prevents flies from laying eggs. Water it down and it’s vulnerable. The meat is warmed, moistened, and bacteria grows at a fantastic rate. Don’t soak your deer down; let it dry naturally the good meat is on the other side of the ribs anyway. Excluding the tender loins.

5 Cook venison thoroughly until its well done
Who wants shoe leather? You wouldn’t cook a T-bone steak that way. Why cook venison until it’s dry and hard. Either cook it lightly (10) minutes or long and slow with moisture.

6 Marinate Venison in wine for palatability
What does venison taste like that has been marinating in wine / Wine of course. If you haven’t trimmed off all the fat and you’ve cooked it for an hour or so, you will have a gamey tasting slab of shoe leather that tastes like wine. If that’s what you want have at it but why would you treat excellent meat that way.

7 Some cuts are tender some are tough
True if you don’t trim your venison. Shank meat for example, is just as tender as round or loin---if you remove all the connective tissue. But will be tougher than the inside of a golf ball if you leave all the white fell and silver skin around the muscles. Trim it away and all venison will be tender.


8 You need a professional butcher to prepare venison
If you don’t have time, yes. But is you can take a few hours, bone it out, cut the meat away from the back bone like you would filet a fish. That’s the loin. Cut off the other muscles and trim away the membranes and connective tissue. It won’t look like cuts of beef in the store, but the boneless meat will be delectable. After you try it you’ll always butcher yourself. Really if you take into account all the time you spend scouting, building stands a few hour extra caring for the meat is nothing and it pays big dividends in flavor.

9 An average deer gives you 75 pounds of meat
Dream on. The average yearling buck weight maybe 150 pounds on the hoof, down to 115 field dressed. Cut away the skin, bones, head, feet, and put the boneless meat on a scale you are talking 35-40 pounds. It’s still a lot of meat, and it will taste best because you got it yourself. Deer don’t have a lot of meat but they do have plenty.

10 Venison cuts should resemble beef cuts at the store
Many hunters and their family want deer meat to look like beef. A chuck roast form a 1000-pound steer might weigh 6 pounds. The entire front shoulder from a 150 lb. Deer will weigh 6-lbs. Steaks cut from a deer look like lamb chops. That’s because deer are closer in size to sheep than a cow.
If you want beef buy beef. If you want the best meat you’ve ever tasted, butcher your deer yourself, bone it out, trim it thoroughly. Cook it lightly and it’s tops! But don’t buy into the venison myths. Good meat shouldn’t be treated that way.
 
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