I killed a buck Friday morning, had him quartered out in about 2 hours (took my time, pulled multiple other cuts off too) in 45* weather, with Friday evening the temps dropping into the 20's. I'd add that I let the meat hang back at camp at 45*~ ish degrees for about 2 hours. I also deboned the hind quarters because I had the time and wanted to go ahead and get it knocked out (and not carry that extra wt).
Put him on ice in cooler back at camp for about 24 hours, got home last night and the temps are in the low 20's. I'm doing wet age on ice due to prior success with this method, but never dealt with a Yeti with meat on ice on my back deck with the outside temp below freezing. I've been checking the meat and it's definitely hardening up - though not getting completely frozen (yet). I assume this would slow/stop the aging process? Is that a correct/fair assumption? Due to the amount of time I have this coming week, I was only planning on aging the meat about 3 days. Final thing is I trimmed all of the meat of sinew/silver skin/etc. except the front quarters.
Appreciate any help here. Thanks, guys.
Put him on ice in cooler back at camp for about 24 hours, got home last night and the temps are in the low 20's. I'm doing wet age on ice due to prior success with this method, but never dealt with a Yeti with meat on ice on my back deck with the outside temp below freezing. I've been checking the meat and it's definitely hardening up - though not getting completely frozen (yet). I assume this would slow/stop the aging process? Is that a correct/fair assumption? Due to the amount of time I have this coming week, I was only planning on aging the meat about 3 days. Final thing is I trimmed all of the meat of sinew/silver skin/etc. except the front quarters.
Appreciate any help here. Thanks, guys.