Jump to content

Buthering deer at home


tercel89

Recommended Posts

Posted

I have always butchered my own deer . I shoot them , skin them and butcher them all on my own . I am self taught as my father was a but-hole and wouldnt teach my brother and me anything . I have always cut off and kept almost every and I mean every part of the deer to eat . even the front leg meat and meat that most people throw away all the time . I dont waste it at all . I eat it all . I dont believe in taking it to a place to process it , I do it all . SO ......I was wondering if any of you guys do this and if you do , I would like to know a way to get the "proper" cuts out of the deer like how to get the rib meat out or how to "properly" cut the different segments and cuts out . I have did it my own way so long that I would like to see a different way . Kinda like the drawings you see of cows in a butcher store where there is a cow with drawing on where the sirloin is and the rump roast and the flank steak and such .

  • Replies 14
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted

I always process my own deer. I have used processors before but I enjoy doing it myself. If you pm me your email I will send you a great video on processing. You can also find processing videos on youtube.

Posted
I always process my own deer. I have used processors before but I enjoy doing it myself. If you pm me your email I will send you a great video on processing. You can also find processing videos on youtube.

Cool , thanks and I got a pm headed your way !

Posted

I have helped my grandfather butcher deer before, but I have always taken my own deer to a processor. I want to do it myself starting this year. I don't remember everything my grandfather did, but I remember enough to get some steaks and backstraps. I need to watch a video myself

Guest Spurhunter
Posted

The one deer I took to get processed came back as half of what I thought it would, and it had an odd taste. I have probably done at least 75 deer myself, maybe more. I trim meat VERY lean, and I try to put up at least 75 -100 lbs of ground each year. Thats at least 5 deer worth of ground. It takes time to do it right, but my whole family help me out when its time to grind and seal the ground.

Posted
The one deer I took to get processed came back as half of what I thought it would, and it had an odd taste. I have probably done at least 75 deer myself, maybe more. I trim meat VERY lean, and I try to put up at least 75 -100 lbs of ground each year. Thats at least 5 deer worth of ground. It takes time to do it right, but my whole family help me out when its time to grind and seal the ground.

I use the fat and meat of the deer . If the meat that you take to a processor tastes odd ,then he probably had it out to long . I cut mine up ASAP and get it in the fridge or freezer . Most people that say that deer meat has a "wang" is because the meat has been at room temperature too long . If it is about 45 degrees or lower I hang mine for a day gutted on a rope . If it is above that degrees I butcher it right away .

Posted
I use the fat and meat of the deer . If the meat that you take to a processor tastes odd ,then he probably had it out to long . I cut mine up ASAP and get it in the fridge or freezer . Most people that say that deer meat has a "wang" is because the meat has been at room temperature too long . If it is about 45 degrees or lower I hang mine for a day gutted on a rope . If it is above that degrees I butcher it right away .

What do you do with the fat? It has the consistancy of candle wax. You surely can't cook with it?

Posted
What do you do with the fat? It has the consistancy of candle wax. You surely can't cook with it?

Was wondering that myself.

  • 2 weeks later...
Guest Spurhunter
Posted

Deer fat is awful stuff. That's why most people cut beet fat into anything they make.

Guest adamoxtwo
Posted

I found that Lamb fat agrees with Venison very well.

Posted

I keep reading that you may not be getting your deer back when you take to a processor! I personally don't want a deer that I don't know how long it's laid in the woods. I processed my own last year and hope to do the same this year. I don't have a grinder, so really don't get to use all the bits and pieces.

Posted
I have always butchered my own deer . I shoot them , skin them and butcher them all on my own . I am self taught as my father was a but-hole and wouldnt teach my brother and me anything .

Wow!, You too? I have no one to thank for what little I have learned but me.

I have always cut off and kept almost every and I mean every part of the deer to eat . even the front leg meat and meat that most people throw away all the time . I dont waste it at all . I eat it all . I dont believe in taking it to a place to process it , I do it all . SO ......I was wondering if any of you guys do this and if you do , I would like to know a way to get the "proper" cuts out of the deer like how to get the rib meat out or how to "properly" cut the different segments and cuts out . I have did it my own way so long that I would like to see a different way . Kinda like the drawings you see of cows in a butcher store where there is a cow with drawing on where the sirloin is and the rump roast and the flank steak and such .

I admit I don't eat all the meat on a deer, but I guarantee NONE of it gets wasted. I cut the ribs and all the funky stuff no one eats, toss it in the crock pot with a cup or so of water and the next day.....I have the happiest pit bull east of the mississippi.

Posted

I do my own. I also kill a couple or so deer each year for friends but they go to the processor. I figure 8 hours of labor per deer by the time I skin, quarter, debone, and grind. I am VERY picky about how the meat is handled and separating the sinew and silver skin from the meat, it is very labor intensive but I've had several people tell me "this is really good BEEF!" yeah I don't always tell my guests what they are eating. It feels like I throw away a lot of stuff when I am separating out all the junk but that's just the way it is, besides something (racoons maybe a coyote) will eat it when I throw it out so it's not going to waste.

Posted

I've been wanting to do my own. John Sloan lives in my neighborhood and a few of us got together and brought him a deer so he could show us in person. Well, I had car trouble and got to his house right as he was shrink wrapping the meat and basically missed it. :(

I field dress my deer right. I don't want some yahoo's deer that rode around in the truck all day while it's bow season and 75 deg outside. Or he punctured the bladder. My son is a Weblo 1 Scout and one of the kid's older brother comes with him and his Dad. I think the boy has it bad for one of the other kid's older sister that comes also. All the Dads can see it. LOL! Anyway, this kid has a part time job at one of the meat places. He told me if you got your actual deer back it'd be a miracle, you're getting the weight.

Brad

Posted
What do you do with the fat? It has the consistancy of candle wax. You surely can't cook with it?

Oddly enough, I've always rendered mine into candle wax or used it as a natural lube for my muzzle loaders. Personally, I prefer to mix in hog fat or lard with my ground venison - seems to age a little better than using beef fat.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

TRADING POST NOTICE

Before engaging in any transaction of goods or services on TGO, all parties involved must know and follow the local, state and Federal laws regarding those transactions.

TGO makes no claims, guarantees or assurances regarding any such transactions.

THE FINE PRINT

Tennessee Gun Owners (TNGunOwners.com) is the premier Community and Discussion Forum for gun owners, firearm enthusiasts, sportsmen and Second Amendment proponents in the state of Tennessee and surrounding region.

TNGunOwners.com (TGO) is a presentation of Enthusiast Productions. The TGO state flag logo and the TGO tri-hole "icon" logo are trademarks of Tennessee Gun Owners. The TGO logos and all content presented on this site may not be reproduced in any form without express written permission. The opinions expressed on TGO are those of their authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the site's owners or staff.

TNGunOwners.com (TGO) is not a lobbying organization and has no affiliation with any lobbying organizations.  Beware of scammers using the Tennessee Gun Owners name, purporting to be Pro-2A lobbying organizations!

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to the following.
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Guidelines
 
We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.