EdP
WKR
Whether you put your meat in a cooler or cover it with a sleeping bag, adding a bucket or jugs of water will help to keep the meat from freezing. The water will freeze before the meat does.
Thanks for taking the time to respond and sharing your system. I would have figured it would be not the best for meat to be frozen within that first day, taken out to thaw and process, and then stick back in the freezer until you’re ready to eat but sounds like it’s worked well for youI may of still left out a couple things. I put a 3/4" piece of plywood over the top of the dinning room table for domestic peace.
I bring in a half of elk or deer and set them on the table to thaw. Depending on the meat, they will thaw in two to three days. I then cut that up in an evening and start over.
When the kids were home and we had deer, I would have everthing cut by february.
When I lived in warmer climates I always figured to buy a refrigerated box off a wrecked truck. I never found one so that should give you a hint on how often that occurs.
I have seen advertisements of portable coolers on tv but nothing in Montana.
Informative, thank you! Wish I lived somewhere colder- Colorado in September/October is still so warm Im trying to figure the best way to keep meat cold (not frozen) but also not too hot to spoil in those 72 hoursFrom the animal's time of death to roughly 72 hours post mortem is the chemical process of glycolysis. That's the time to allow the muscles to stiffen and then relax as glucose is converted to lactic acid (tenderizing enzyme). For maximum tenderness, do not process before this time is complete and do not allow the meat itself to drop below 30F. After the 3rd day post harvest, do whatever you need to do because it ain't getting anymore tender than post harvest day 5.
If you're trying to prevent freezing the first 12-24 hours in "teens" temps, leave the hide on qtrs or huddle the meat together inside a tarp to restrict airflow and contain radiation heat. If temps are above 20F remove the hide from qtrs and restrict airflow with a tarp and monitor your core temps.
Don't hang meat if you're worried about freezing, as air temps flowing around hangin' meat has a hyper cooling affect (wind and moisture = temp loss)
I've only killed 2 deer so far so take it for what it's worth. Both times though I have broken down the animal and got it in the freezer as quickly as possible.What do you scrub them with? And in September/October in Colorado it’s usually not below freezing at any time of the day, so let’s say I shoot my deer at first light. I’m home by 1pm. I hang him from my garage rafters overnight with a bag of ice in the chest cavity or would you just break him down that same day and put into the freezer? My understanding was the longer it hangs, the better it’ll taste, but temperature control is an issue here and I don’t have enough space to make a walk in cooler
Really appreciate the info and expertise, thank you very muchwith temps under 55F you have no major issues for the first 3 days. If higher than 60F, fat oxidation and autolysis is activated. To combat those temps, increase airflow by hanging or stacking with wind currents hitting all angles. Spray lightly with citric acid after the first 24 hours. Lots of tricks in warm weather too.
This has been extensively covered, here's a video:
Both deer were fantastic tasting and I can't see how aging would have improved the taste. It wasn't gamey at all and was extremely tender in both cases.