I don't hang it more than 24 hrs.
I say this most years...and get ignored most years. 2 of my daughters worked in the Abittour done the road ( 1 is a federal meat inspector at this time) and my Daugther in Law's parents own the opposition as far as Butcher shops. All say " Hang it if you want, the enzymes that do their magic on beef are absent in venison..."
The majority of online articles will pontificate on how it improves it... but to be a writer at American Outdoorsman don't make you any sort of expert on meat handling. It makes you a story teller.
Do as you see fit...but I wait 24 hours to get Rigor mortis out and either butcher it or freeze the whole 1/4's for when I have time. Life is awesome now...no more wondering if it has turned
Kill it, dress it. hang it for 24 hrs and cut it up ( or freeze it if time is short). Best discovery ever...I love it.
Rare, but I happened across this article excerpt.
I am very opposed to aging deer. This is not just my opinion, there is science behind it.
Beef is the meat that we were all raised eating, that is commonly aged. And only the young beef raised for steaks are aged (steers and heifers) not the beef that is made into hamburger and sausages. Hamburger animals are usually older animals, most often cows that are past their peak milk producing years. Beef has an enzyme within the marbling of the meat that breaks down in time “aging”, especially when aged for a long time at SPECIFIC temperatures AND humidity. And aging does significantly improve the tenderness of that meat. However, venison does not have those same enzymes in the marbling. In fact, even if venison had that same enzyme, venison has little or no marbling within the meat. There are very few animals that are aged. Pork and poultry are always cut and packaged ASAP. Even when you buy commercially raised deer and elk (which are raised on farms and butchered and inspected in the same way as beef), they are not aged. If aging was beneficial, those animals would certainly be aged because that market sells to restaurants and high-end grocery stores.
The reason I say never age venison “on purpose” is because if venison is properly cooled, it does “tolerate” a fair amount of temperature variation. Venison is a low moisture meat and has a very low moisture fat which tolerates “hanging around” better than most meats. This is very beneficial to us hunters who hunt out west or other far away places where refrigeration is delayed. The key to any meat tasting fresh and not having off flavors is to field dress and cool the animal AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. The usual conditions (in the woods or other less than sanitary settings) which we kill our venison also adds LOTS of bacteria to the meat. That bacteria is a big culprit for “off” flavors in venison. When venison or any meat sits or “ages”, that bacteria grows like crazy.