I don't have a walk in cooler. So, after I take the hide off my kill, I quarter up the parts, and put them in "clean" trash bags. Then, I just put the bags in the workshop frig for 3-4 days to cool. After that, my wife and I process the meat / FoodSaver the parts from there.
Saying all that, here's the question: If you also use trash bags to put your deer meat in ... which ones do you use? It seems all the new trash bags have a perfume / pesticide smell to them, and I'm not keen about putting my meat within (but see no other choice).
Thanks in advance!
David
I've never bagged my meat during cooling. If I have to put them in something, I use game bags to let the meat breath and cool. I'd say if you want bags without the perfumes, the large contractor bags you get at the home improvement stores made from 6 mil poly will do the job, odor free. They are also much larger, and by far stronger than household bags. They do however cost more.
According to a butcher/sausage maker I took meat to a bunch of years ago, never, never, never use garbage bags only clear plastic bags. Perfumes, pesticides, and whatever else they put in them for 'garbage' is not good for your meat.
I would add that if you are aging meat it would probably work better in game bags so the meat can breath. Part of aging meat is the reduction in moisture content and that happens best without plastic bags.
Tall white kitchen force flex no scent.
I hear you shouldn't use any plastic garbage bag especially the black ones. I am open to options but I also have to quarter and pack in the old fridge much of the year to cool.
I honestly can't tell any difference to meet hung in cold weather skin on our bagged in my fridge.
It has become tougher to find untreated bags. With that being said, I use heavy cotton game bags anymore.
Throw them in the wash w/bleach and they are good to go again. Has worked fabulously with deer, elk, antelope, and moose.
Do the game bags leak much? At times I have to pack meat in the same fridge as our food until I can cool down and transport.
Also does anyone know of a source for good size food approved plastic bags?
QuoteOriginally posted by xtrema312:
Also does anyone know of a source for good size food approved plastic bags?
X2
If you happen to know anyone that owns or runs a restaurant or any kind of food service business...ask them to order you what you need from their broad line restaurant supply company. Sysco, US Foods, Performance Food Group or whoever they use. They can get you just about whatever you want in a variety of sizes big or small and the price is usually pretty good.
Also, the trash bags they sell, generally in black OR clear ( many restaurants prefer clear to keep employees from actually throwing away equipment) come in various thickness and a multitude of sizes. Never experienced a restaurant grade trash bag with any perfume, odor etc. Again, you can get cases if these things for comparably good prices.
If you don't know a restaurant owner...if you frequent a place quite a bit and the owners know you...don't be afraid to ask for the favor. They generally do multiple orders a week and it isn't much if a problem to add a couple cases here and there. Offer them an extra couple bucks for their trouble...or maybe a little bit of your fresh meat for their personal dinner!!
OR....if you live in or near a decent size city find a good restaurant supply store. Talk to them about getting what you need. Good ones will stick a variety of bags for food prep and storage. They can also order special sizes. Might cost a bit more but all will be food safe and restaurant size cases might last you a while.
Yes, restaurant supply stores will carry what you need, or even talk to a local butcher shop and see if they will sell you enough to cover a deer each year. Don't use the garbage bags.
ChuckC
if you have a few more minutes when quartering just debone all the meat and use large stainless bowls with plastic wrap draped over the top. Or, if you have the time just process asap and get it frozen. Meat doesn't seem to care if it has been frozen or not before aging and if you plan ahead just thaw the cuts you want to eat in the frig a few days ahead of dinner. Works great for me.
I'll use bags to get deer out of the woods using the 'gutless" method but they go directly into the stainless bowls and into the frig when I get in.
Uline or Consolidated plastics sell food grade poly bags.
I just get the pieces small enough to go into 1 gallon freezer ziplocs.
I would never want to put mine in a plastic bag of any kind if it is even the slightest bit warm. Game bags pillow cases anything that will let the meat breath
Can't substantiate this statement, but read numerous places that the enzymes in meat, interact with the chemicals in plastic trash bags... regardless of scent etc.
I won't do it!
Here's a trick I picked up living in MT and I've done for over 30 yrs now:
Get a small package of Crisco. Once you skin your deer, use a flat blade to scrape off an residual hair or leaf litter, etc, and wipe each stroke on a paper towel.
Once clean, rub some Crisco on your hands and rub lightly over the entire carcass---INSIDE and outside.
It seals the meat and prevents that ugly dark "crust" from forming while your meat ages. Being its a vegetable "fat" it does not turn rancid in the freezer.
I put a light cheese cloth bag for deer over it to make handling easier.
If you cut into quarters for the fridge, then no bags are needed with the coating of Crisco!
Try it. You'll like it! Helps to handle with paper towels till you cut it up. I wipe it down with paper towels before I start cutting but usually leave my carcass whole if I can.
I've taken out the shelves in an old fridge, and stood one up on a diagonal. Sweet!
if you have a few more minutes when quartering just debone all the meat and use large stainless bowls with plastic wrap draped over the top
X2
The only other thing I do is put a small plate upside down in the bottom of the bowl so blood can collect there. I debone the hams while hanging either in the field or if I bring it home whole which is rarely now adays. Lot easier to debone while hanging.
I bone my deer in the field and pack out. Then put in old refrigerator. But don't put the meat in anything. Air needs to get to it..also don't let it lay one side too long, keep flipping the parts to stop moisture from collecting.
The outside will turn dark and dry and you will have to trim a litte more..but it will age better this way.
Definitely don't put the meat in plastic bags. They don't breathe and are breeding grounds for bacteria.
"Aging" isn't beneficial unless conditions are carefully controlled.
We hunt late here, in very cold conditions. We have trouble keeping deer from freezing. Trust me: you won't know what fun is until you've tried to peel a frozen deer.
Anyway, that means we package a lot of deer within hours of harvest. They are every bit as good as deer that we've hung longer.
Southern deer cooler-
Take one igloo cooler... Put 6-8 in ice across bottom....
Lay meat on top,....
My twist...
Two 5 gal buckets in garage
Place a piece of 2x4 on one bucket, set cooler on top of buckets
With drain on bottom end
Keep drain open and let drain in one bucket
Check ice and refresh as necessary... Under meat not on
top...
Process after 4-5 days....or when convenient...
Don't laugh, it flat out works and coolers are food safe...
You can either wipe down with bleach or fill cooler with water and oxy clean (let sit 4-5 hrs...not very convenient after you have a deer to cool )to sterilize cooler so it is sanitary...
I use the cooler method also. Quarter it up then place it all in the cooler except for one ham that goes to a local BarBecue place to cook on one of their pits. Anyway put in a bag of ice then fill the rest of the way with water. Just drain the water every day and refill with water. You may have to put more ice in if it melts. After 4 days process it and put in vacuum bags and seal it up. The doe I did last year taste like beef and not venison. The way you can tell is the texture is like venison. My daughter swears she wont eat deer but with it tasting like beef she eats it and doesn't know. Shhhh! Don't tell her. Lol!
Thank you for the info gents.
Doc Nock, Jen and I will try your idea, and see how it works. I hope to go out tomorrow, mid day and be back with either a deer. And if that doesn't work... a turkey will do just fine too!
David
I use an old refrigerator in my garage to age boned meat...I call it my Poor Boys walk in...
I turn the temp to as close to freezing as possible .I have plywood shelves on the racks, and use waxed boxes with the meat lightly covered wit some clean cotton sheet material.
I flip the meat around about three times a week...and take away any drainage.
I do this all since I dont have access to a meat locker...and sincerely believe that letting meat age at least a week at 33-34 degrees really helps make the meat more tender (less chewy) .The meat gets that really nice pinkish color too...I read that there are several enzymes that occur naturally at those low temps that help break down the meat a bit ...the good steak houses all do something very similar to get their meat real tender,usually in those huge walk ins etc.
after having to bone and pack out meat in warm weather years ago and going straight to the freezer just did not give me the results I like with Deer, Elk and similar.
this method has worked perfect for 30+ years...my ritual of cleaning up the old reefer every september is just another preperation that tells me its my favorite ytime of year again!
I used the cooler method in Fl..works great. Another method with rank hogs is to use the cooler method only pour grapefuit juice in along with the ice.
To age meat the right way you need a walk in cooler where you can hang it and dry refrigeration with fans.
QuoteOriginally posted by Bobby Urban:
if you have a few more minutes when quartering just debone all the meat and use large stainless bowls with plastic wrap draped over the top. Or, if you have the time just process asap and get it frozen. Meat doesn't seem to care if it has been frozen or not before aging and if you plan ahead just thaw the cuts you want to eat in the frig a few days ahead of dinner. Works great for me.
I'll use bags to get deer out of the woods using the 'gutless" method but they go directly into the stainless bowls and into the frig when I get in.
That's what I do too.
deer bags, bed sheets, or cheese cloth is the only way to go. Hang it outside in a shed or your garage where it can get some air.. if its warmer out the meat will age quicker.... use your nose. sometimes i'll hang one 3-5 days in cold weather. in warm weather i may cut it up the next day....
the nose knows when its time to cut and wrap....
its the natural decomposing process that makes the meat tender... i wrap with butcher paper and don't use plastic at all... 02 cents...
if you don't have a place to hang your deer in a cool place, don't age it at all. cut it up and wrap it, or take it to a butcher.
I put loose meat on top of a folded tea towel in a tray and cover with another tea towel. Legs are just propped up with a tea towel under them to catch any leakage. A few days in the fridge and then bagged and frozen as I get to it.
We have a second fridge in our kitchen just for our deer vegi's, makes life pretty easy.
Here is a full fallow deer in the fridge waiting for some spare time to cut it up
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v243/jindydiver/2012/doe_in_the_fridge.jpg)
i just use mutton cloth and hang the meat for a couple of days then put in the freezer wrapped in cling film. job done :thumbsup: