for wet storage go get some veggie bags at the store and put 'em in that before using the foodsaver. for game I used the same method and deer I shot three years ago was delicious. Birds go straight in the foodsaver.
Thanks
Sure thing guys. I only just realized you could quote multiple people by clicking reply more than one time.Thanks Stuart.....It was a daunting task for us techy type guys......
Sorry to be confusing ,but I was talking about a freezer unit that auto-defrosts (keeps it from building frost in the first place). The auto-defrosting ones are indeed the ones that cause the freezer burn by removing the moisture from the environment inside of the freezer, and if there is a hole in your packaging or your food isn't sealed it will be desiccated :OJust to clarify, you're talking about needing to defrost, not needing a freezer that automatically defrosts itself. Defrosting is a pain in the neck, but my point is that units that don't auto-defrost won't dry the meat out.
lol like a rock! You'd pull out meatcicles.Seriously never even thought about what freezer type to use. Never had a problem. I know the old style were a pain to get stuff out. Frozen like a rock.. The newer style worked for my requirements.
I'd be curious to see if your stuff tastes better or worse vs what everyone else seems to do. Maybe you should enter some cooking competitions or somethingThe crust is from the lack of moisture......deers body temp is 102 and the bones hold the heat really well. That's why I debone plus the weight of the bone and your one step closer in the processing
I'm the opposite on here I always do the gutless debone on the spot and stuff it in a heavy duty plastic bag then cool it in a stream or in the cooler.
I've also done the submerge in ice water, or put beer cans on the bottom of the cooler then meat & ice......all turned out the same.
Heat is the biggie
lol like a rock! You'd pull out meatcicles.
I'd be curious to see if your stuff tastes better or worse vs what everyone else seems to do. Maybe you should enter some cooking competitions or something
The only time my meat every tastes gamey is when I can't get the blood out or cool it quickly enough. The most common way to ruin a tenderloin is, after gutting, let the tenderloin marinate in warm blood at the bottom of the body cavity in the bed of your truck. I shot a 600+ pound elk last fall and it took us awhile to get the Polaris to it. I field dressed it, and I didn't want to skin it in the field because of the dirt and dust. By the time I'd harvested the tenderloins back at the cabin, they were gamier than I'd ever tasted elk meat. Too much heat and blood. The rest of the meat, including backstraps, was fine. That tells me it was the "marinade" as much as the retained body heat. The tenderloin is the canary in the coal mine, I think. Very delicate flavor and easy to damage. If I had it to to over again I'd take the loins as soon as I was done gutting, and put them in a small game bag. Maybe I'll try a controlled experiment in the future... But not on elk
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The flavor comes from a few things yes the lack of blood helps. But a few things compound it and it's luck sometimes.
Ageing, hormones, diet, game animal, field prep(urine, poop, dirt) age of the animal all have an effect. Some good some bad
As to a cooking contest......never had a bad piece of game animal and I'm picky!
most of the old big game like the old bucks are usually tough and gamey. I do the same with rabbit soak it in brine the day before cooking. it helps. I in addition i generally remove the the sack glands on the rear legs. and like Don I don't skin it until it's in camp were I can hang it.
My motto is "a day spent without learning something is a day wasted" !
My motto is "a day spent without learning something is a day wasted" !
My motto is "a day spent without learning something is a day wasted" !
LOL that posted 3x..few words huhIf you don't learn sometime new every day you're not paying attn
Man of few words