feanor
WKR
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2018
- Messages
- 1,240
Has anybody found a good processor in Colorado Springs? I’ve seen Ted Baker but don’t know anybody who has used them. I usually process myself, but sometimes, time won’t allow.
Dude, its backstrap, there is no trimming to be done. I'd have cut them into steaks myself if I'd had the butcher paper to wrap them in. Did it my self the next year. But so I don't take it the wrong way, please explain how my straps/loins I asked to be simply cut into 8oz cuts came back weighing signicantly less then the drop off weight? Im certainly not a professional, but I can cut my own backstraps into portions without losing a decent portion of undamaged meat.Definitely shouldn’t be cutting meat with a dip in. Don’t take this the wrong way but you might want to think about your statement about how you don’t understand how your loins and backstraps came out weighing less after processing.
Everything needs to be trimmed, even straps. If it’s aged at all, even the time from killing it to the time the butcher starts cutting, it will start to get a rind. The backstop, unless you trimmed it yourself, has the “cap” that needs to be removed. Unless you did an amazing job, there is probably some pine needles, dirt, etc that needs to be trimmed. Here’s a picture of an untrimmed backstrap from an elk then the same strap ready for the freezer. If you want to eat this as is, you better have a lot of A-1.Dude, its backstrap, there is no trimming to be done. I'd have cut them into steaks myself if I'd had the butcher paper to wrap them in. Did it my self the next year. But so I don't take it the wrong way, please explain how my straps/loins I asked to be simply cut into 8oz cuts came back weighing signicantly less then the drop off weight? Im certainly not a professional, but I can cut my own backstraps into portions without losing a decent portion of undamaged meat.
We're talking pounds, multiple...not ounces of dried crust or some grass and dust.Everything needs to be trimmed, even straps. If it’s aged at all, even the time from killing it to the time the butcher starts cutting, it will start to get a rind. The backstop, unless you trimmed it yourself, has the “cap” that needs to be removed. Unless you did an amazing job, there is probably some pine needles, dirt, etc that needs to be trimmed. Here’s a picture of an untrimmed backstrap from an elk then the same strap ready for the freezer. If you want to eat this as is, you better have a lot of A-1.
I take my meat very seriously and I’m confident nobody beats my meat!
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U huys are hilarious, yep, you're the only two to ever kill and butcher for meat. No sane person wpuld expect the crust to stay on cut meat, nor dirt. But I guess for the sake of hearing yourself talk you felt it necessary to clarify and assume (incorrectly) that that accounts for the majority of lost meat.Ucsdryder nailed it. Couldn’t explain it any better myself so I’m not going to.