So I finished my aging on Sunday. So the 17th. I originally put the frozen solid quarters in the fridge on the 18th of December. I kept a pretty close eye one it as I was using a humidifier in the fridge to keep the humidity between 70-80%. View attachment 254730Everything seemed to go pretty good. I pulled it because I started to get a greenish yellow mold. I looked it up and everything I read said the colored mold was ok as long as it wasn't dark or black. View attachment 254719
The meat under the rine was that darker dryer meat the Robby showed with his. However, the meat under the hide was starting to be almost brown. After removing the "brown" the neat under that was very moist and red. No blood just a clearing juicy. The meat looked and smelled great.
View attachment 254729I fried up a couple of these steaks and the taste was fantastic! It was a little weird at first because I had never had aged meat. I was expecting it to taste like my normal deer steaks. However it a had a much richer flavor. As many have said kind of earthy tones if that makes any sense at all. Before I had had these steaks I had no clue what "earthy" tones ment. I will definitely be be aging all my deer from now on. However, I will remove the hide next time as I still had to trim about 1/4" off everything. Thanks again everyone on here and especially Robby for inspiring me with this thread.
Yeah it was pretty easy having the fridge. The only thing I will need next time is a small fan for circulation. I was opening both doors twice a day with a floor fan blowing into it just to get fresh air in.Yeah I think that’s why the original chef taught me this said just skin them, as you end up trimming them anyways.
Thanks for giving it a try and for everyone else that has too.
I’m surprise no one spoiled a deer yet, shows you that this must not be all that hard. Like the chef said, 33 to 40°, not much can go wrong. just watch for high humidity if you’re in an enclosed space.
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very helpful and thanks for taking the time to share your experiences. Hide on!Not sure if this adds much to the thread, but here's a recap of my experience (so far) with aging:
Observations/takeaways/notes:
- 12/6/20 - shot whitetail doe/brought home for self-processing/two rear legs removed in the field, front half--spine, loins, front legs, neck, and head--all remain intact and brought home in one piece/hide was left on all three pieces (2 rear legs, 1 front half)/all three pieces hung from the rafters in my unheated, uninsulated, attached garage
- 12/9/20 through 12/11/20 - unseasonably warm daytime temps (50 degrees plus) meant my garage would be too warm to continue the aging process/all meat was taken down each morning, placed on old sheets on the cool concrete floor, frozen bottles of water placed in and around the entire carcass, and everything covered in old blankets during the day/each night the pieces would be removed and rehung since the inside garage temps fall to just above freezing at night/this process is repeated each day until daytime highs drop below 40 degrees
- 12/12/20 - primary butchering of the deer (6 days after being shot)/front half and one of two hind legs completely butchered, packed, and stacked in the freezer/one hind left to hang for the next several weeks
- 1/9/21 - remaining hind quarter butchered (34 days after being shot)/small piece cooked and eaten but majority packed and stacked int the freezer
All pics are of the hindquarter after 34 days of aging. Hopefully, this adds something of value to this great thread. I'm happy to expand on any of this if it is helpful. Thanks everyone!
- Topline: Based on what I've experienced I see no reason to shy away from 30+ days of aging
- The 34 day old sample piece of hindquarter I sampled after butchering 1/9/21 was seasoned with salt, pepper and cooked quickly on a cast-iron skillet, a pat of herbed butter was thrown on at the end as I let the meat rest for a few minutes after cooking. Flavor was very good, zero gamey-ness (sp?), very tender, I did not really detect any hint of "blue cheese" funkiness that you typically get from dry-aged beef
- Leaving the hide on seems to have been a wise move. The exposed flesh developed a notable rind/crust that was trimmed away so there was some (albeit minimal) loss, but what was underneath remained supple and looked great. Had I removed the hide right away there would have more crust to remove and thus more loss.
- There was just a hint of white mold beginning to form in a few spots. Nothing I wasn't expecting, but zero slime, off-color mold or any form of rotting stench was present. Anything other than the white stuff and I would have had real concerns, thankfully that wasn't the case
- This little experiment worked well enough that I'm weighing different options for temp control next season. Whether it's finding an old fridge, constructing a temporary insulated "chamber" of some sort for hunting season, or something more permanent. Basically, taking things up and down on warm days felt like a burden that could fairly easily be avoided in the future
- I don't yet feel 100% confident saying this was a slam dunk success. Reason being, 90% of that doe is still in the freezer, I just haven't consumed enough yet to say for certain. But based on everything outside of taste, I'd recommend anyone try it if you have the means. If you're curious but not sure, consider doing as I did, save a quarter to age, and process the rest on your normal timeline. Risk management
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yes, my buddy from England about puked when he saw me cooking fresh pheasant. "We hang 'em guts-in, upside down on the porch until green drips out their noses"It's not much to add but I've started putting my upland birds in a paper bag in the back of the fridge for a week or so and I think they are a lot better. I've heard the old timer technique was to hang the birds in the woodshed by the head and when the body fell off then it was done. I haven't given that a try due to not having a good space but would be curious to.
Ugh, I think that's even worse than waiting for the head to fall off.We hang 'em guts-in, upside down on the porch until green drips out their noses"
I wonder how many days it takes for the brown to show up under skin? I think I did about 9 days with a skin on buck this year and didn’t have to trim any brown or crust. We did a couple pigs skin on for about a week too. I think next year I will need to push it a few days longer and see if it gets any better! Love this thread..Yeah I think that’s why the original chef taught me this said just skin them, as you end up trimming them anyways.
Thanks for giving it a try and for everyone else that has too.
I’m surprise no one spoiled a deer yet, shows you that this must not be all that hard. Like the chef said, 33 to 40°, not much can go wrong. just watch for high humidity if you’re in an enclosed space.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I wonder how many days it takes for the brown to show up under skin? I think I did about 9 days with a skin on buck this year and didn’t have to trim any brown or crust. We did a couple pigs skin on for about a week too. I think next year I will need to push it a few days longer and see if it gets any better! Love this thread..
also been trying to improve the waterfowl and upland aging game. Killed 43 ducks this year so far and have been experimenting with aging time/temp. For me, 36-48 hours hung outside in the shade (40lows 60highs) is the right combination of enhanced flavor and tenderness for ducks. I like 24 hours for quail. Left a few ducks as long as 96 hours and had some unsavory flavors come into play. 48 hours felt like too long for the quail. It’s pretty dang warm down here this year so maybe if the temps stayed colder I could get away with longer..
How did the 30-day hindquarter compare to the 6-day hindquarter? In terms of flavor, tenderness.Not sure if this adds much to the thread, but here's a recap of my experience (so far) with aging:
Observations/takeaways/notes:
- 12/6/20 - shot whitetail doe/brought home for self-processing/two rear legs removed in the field, front half--spine, loins, front legs, neck, and head--all remain intact and brought home in one piece/hide was left on all three pieces (2 rear legs, 1 front half)/all three pieces hung from the rafters in my unheated, uninsulated, attached garage
- 12/9/20 through 12/11/20 - unseasonably warm daytime temps (50 degrees plus) meant my garage would be too warm to continue the aging process/all meat was taken down each morning, placed on old sheets on the cool concrete floor, frozen bottles of water placed in and around the entire carcass, and everything covered in old blankets during the day/each night the pieces would be removed and rehung since the inside garage temps fall to just above freezing at night/this process is repeated each day until daytime highs drop below 40 degrees
- 12/12/20 - primary butchering of the deer (6 days after being shot)/front half and one of two hind legs completely butchered, packed, and stacked in the freezer/one hind left to hang for the next several weeks
- 1/9/21 - remaining hind quarter butchered (34 days after being shot)/small piece cooked and eaten but majority packed and stacked int the freezer
All pics are of the hindquarter after 34 days of aging. Hopefully, this adds something of value to this great thread. I'm happy to expand on any of this if it is helpful. Thanks everyone!
- Topline: Based on what I've experienced I see no reason to shy away from 30+ days of aging
- The 34 day old sample piece of hindquarter I sampled after butchering 1/9/21 was seasoned with salt, pepper and cooked quickly on a cast-iron skillet, a pat of herbed butter was thrown on at the end as I let the meat rest for a few minutes after cooking. Flavor was very good, zero gamey-ness (sp?), very tender, I did not really detect any hint of "blue cheese" funkiness that you typically get from dry-aged beef
- Leaving the hide on seems to have been a wise move. The exposed flesh developed a notable rind/crust that was trimmed away so there was some (albeit minimal) loss, but what was underneath remained supple and looked great. Had I removed the hide right away there would have more crust to remove and thus more loss.
- There was just a hint of white mold beginning to form in a few spots. Nothing I wasn't expecting, but zero slime, off-color mold or any form of rotting stench was present. Anything other than the white stuff and I would have had real concerns, thankfully that wasn't the case
- This little experiment worked well enough that I'm weighing different options for temp control next season. Whether it's finding an old fridge, constructing a temporary insulated "chamber" of some sort for hunting season, or something more permanent. Basically, taking things up and down on warm days felt like a burden that could fairly easily be avoided in the future
- I don't yet feel 100% confident saying this was a slam dunk success. Reason being, 90% of that doe is still in the freezer, I just haven't consumed enough yet to say for certain. But based on everything outside of taste, I'd recommend anyone try it if you have the means. If you're curious but not sure, consider doing as I did, save a quarter to age, and process the rest on your normal timeline. Risk management
View attachment 251974View attachment 251975View attachment 251976View attachment 251977
How did the 30-day hindquarter compare to the 6-day hindquarter? In terms of flavor, tenderness.
Ended up not doing the comparison on New Years like I planned (didn't have the aged quarter cut up yet).
I thawed a bit of both aged and regular to have for dinner tonight for my wife and I. I'll make some notes and make a post on her thoughts and mine.