Update,
I let my buck hang for 28 days before I cut him up, skin on, in the garage. Meat was hanging around 36-38 degrees during that time frame. At around day 16-18 I started seeing some mold start to form on the cavity of the deer where the insides was exposed to the air. At day 28, there was a lot of mold haha. When I cut the the deer up I didn’t lose much because I left the skin on there wasn’t much dried up and no rind on the outside of the meat. I cut up the deer a little different than I have in the past by keeping the hams whole because I am going to smoke them, and I kept one shoulder blade whole for braising, and I also kept the backstraps on the bone as well, this left me with only 8 pounds of hamburger meat, that’s ok I have a lot from my elk.
When I first ate some of my backstraps I wasn’t completely sold on the 28 days, and really didn’t like dealing with the mold that was present. The taste was pretty good but nothing special, I did lose some of the flanks and paunch because they dried up on the inside and wasn’t left with much to salvage.
But the other night I cooked up some loin that was on the bone on the traeger and good googli moogli was it good, best steak I’ve ever had. At that point I knew that the aging had done something for that meat. I am not sure if I’ll go for 28 days again, I think between 14-21 would be sufficient. If I kill a deer and I can hang it whole I’ll continue to do so with the skin on.
Also, cooking in a Dutch oven with meat on the bone is my go to these days. Cooking the shoulder blade on the bone is fantastic way of doing it and is a great alternative to making burger out of the whole dang thing.
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