Aging

How long do people usually age elk meat?
I have a few packages from 2024 that are still aging in the freezer.

If I have a climate controlled cooler that I can hang meat in, I age 14 days. If not, I age 1 week with quarters in vented igloo style coolers with ice blocks ensuring the meat stays out of the melting ice water.
 
The main thing is to wait until rigor mortis is over and the muscle fibers have relaxed. 48 hours I think, longer (another 24 hours) in cold temperatures. Everything after that is an incremental gain. That said, I usually wait 4-7 days and butcher one or two quarters a night so by the time I finish the last quarter it might have aged 10 days.
 
I dont go out of my way to age elk but it does take me a while to get it cut up.

The one i shot last fall, i shot about 10 am. I cut it up , put it in alaska game bags and hung it in the shade while i retrieved my frame pack from my vehicle. This let the meat cool off to the ambient 50 degrees with a stiff breeze. . I like this better than locking hot meat in a cooler. I had it packed out and on ice by 4 pm. I had it in 2 large coolers, with 110 lbs of ice spread over all of the meat. I waited until 9 am the next morning to start my cutting. Some did not get finished until the next day. So far it has all been very tender, more so than commercial beef. Sorry I do not have any scientific test results for you.

The pheasants I shot i hung whole for 9-11 days. They are very tender.
 
we just did 14 on @Cashman bull and it wasn't enough.

I don't have the lab-age back but I'm guessing a 5+ bull.

We've eaten rounds (as jerky), sirloin & backstrap and all are tougher than my buck that was lab-aged at 6 and also right around that 14 day mark.

Bull still tastes fine, just a little more chewin' than I like.

I had Chef McGannon on the Rokcast last fall and he likes 28 days for bulls.

 
I never intentionally age elk meat. I usually have it in cooler in under 8 hours...and processed in 2-5 days. One year solo was only time I hung it overnight in the mountains. All my family members love the elk meat and prefer it over nearly all other meats. Age of the bull and how quickly it expires has more to do with final outcome than aging IMO.

Do what works best for you. Good Luck.
 
I did 14 days on my bull this year and also wasn’t enough.

Had some loin last night next to a deer loin that was aged 10-12 days. The deer loin was significantly more tender.
 
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