Quarter or De Bone?

Goober

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jul 22, 2012
Messages
109
Location
Central Wisconsin
and just to clairify.....I am not at all arguing one way or the other, just looking to hear if anyone takes this into consideration or has noticed a difference.
 
Joined
May 23, 2012
Messages
707
I like to quarter if possible. It saves some meat from getting dirty. Unfortunately, most critters I kill are in places where de-boning makes life easier, so thats usually what I do.
 

2rocky

WKR
Joined
Jun 21, 2012
Messages
1,144
Location
Nor Cal
I'm sure I answered this somewhere else, but I like the rigidity of the legbones for packing.

I think going through Rigor Mortis on the bone improved tenderness. Ideally you don't want to freeze a carcass before Rigor because of the cold shortening effect on the muscle fibers. (Think Seinfeld scene "Shrinkage"). Commercial packing facilities have a "hotbox" where the carcass is cooled to between 70 and 50 degrees F for 24 hours before going into the deep freeze locker.
Rigor mortis is very important in meat technology. The onset of rigor mortis and its resolution partially determines the tenderness of meat. If the postslaughter meat is immediately chilled to 15°C (59°F), a phenomenon known as cold shortening occurs, where the muscle sarcomeres shrink to a third of their original length.

Cold shortening is caused by the release of stored calcium ions from the sarcoplasmic reticulum of muscle fibers in response to the cold stimulus. The calcium ions trigger powerful muscle contraction aided by ATP molecules. To prevent cold shortening, a process known as electrical stimulation is carried out, especially in beef carcasses, immediately after slaughter and skinning. In this process, the carcass is stimulated with alternating current, causing it to contract and relax, which depletes the ATP reserve from the carcass and prevents cold shortening.[6]

It could be argued that the "death run" of a bowkilled animal would reduce the ATP reserves, but I don't know of any studies that looked at it. HMMMM....Maybe I need to do a masters....
 

RUTTIN

WKR
Joined
Jun 5, 2012
Messages
357
Location
Kamas, Utah
I have always quartered my animals with the bone in to pack out. But this year if I am lucky, I am going to bone it out. As far as letting game hang and age, I don't buy it. Since I have cut up my animals the day I kill them(getting all of the fat and bone off) I have never had meat taste so good. I think that a lot of the gamey taste people get, is from hanging animals with the fat and bone still on, letting all of the gamey taste seep in to the meat. Just my .02 cents.
 

Jager

WKR
Joined
Apr 25, 2012
Messages
658
Location
Australia
Goober, you are quiet correct with leaving the bone in and hanging the quarter producing much more palatable meat, it is a process known as tender stretch hanging, the weight of the quarter giving the weight needed to stretch the meat as enzymes begin to break everything down, this is where a meats tenderness comes from. There is no question, the method produces better meat. However, as it is not always possible for a hunter to carry full quarters out we need to de-bone. If it is possible once you get the meat to refrigeration, try and let it age in its different cuts for at least a few days before freezing, again, this definitely improves the quality of the meat. I have experimented with different aged cuts from the same animal, both with hanging and letting sit on a plate in refrigeration to see (taste) how things go, the longer it is aged the better it becomes, tender wise, the trick is to know when to refrigerate before it starts to go off.

There are glands between cuts of meat in the hindquarters of Red deer that, if not cut out, will absolutely destroy the venison and have heard people complain that the meat is too gamey, yet, they had no idea about the glands.
 

bounds

WKR
Joined
Jul 5, 2012
Messages
412
Location
NW Arkansas
I was thinking yesterday about posting a question to see if anyone had a video or pics of deboning and how they do it in the field. Just got on and saw this thread. Would love to see the video Aron.
 
Top