cohunter14
Administrator
- Jul 10, 2017
- 5,431
I put this in the elk forum since I am tailoring this more towards elk than other big game. We started processing our own game last year with our test subjects being a couple of antelope. We just decided it was silly to continue paying as much as we were to have animals processed, and it would also give us something to do over the winter! We ended up just making a bunch of jerky and it turned out awesome! However, an elk created more issues, including the fact that we weren\'t going to make all jerky.
We brought the elk back quartered, skinned, in game bags and in then in some large coolers. We also had a separate bag for the back-straps and tenderloins. The day after we got back, we de-bonded the meat, cleaned it all up, and cut it into chunks that would fit into our grinder. We decided to throw all of those chunks into a couple of garbage bags and freeze the meat until we could get back around to it. At the same time, we also de-bonded the quarters from my antelope that I had shot the weekend before. I had vacuum sealed those quarters and put them into the freezer.
Tip #1: Do not freeze whole quarters and do not freeze a big bag of chunked meat unless you have to.
This is because I had to thaw the antelope quarters just to de-bone them. We then had to thaw the chunked up meat just to grind it up. This leads to freezing, thawing, freezing, thawing, etc. In a perfect scenario, my suggestion would be to de-bone the meat as soon as possible to avoid freezing the quarters.
Tip #2: Once it is de-boned, I would suggest grinding everything and weighing it out into packs to vacuum seal before freezing the meat.
This is obviously only for the meat that will be turned into burger, sausage, jerky, etc. At that same time, you can take any roasts or steaks and vacuum seal those as well. By weighing out the packages, you also avoid freezing, thawing, and freezing again. Weigh anything that is to be made into jerky or sausage into five pound bags since most of the seasoning kits out there are for five pounds at a time. That way you can remove a bag, thaw it, and get to work making jerky or sausage. You can weigh the burger into whatever size bags you would expect to cook at one time. We did mainly 1 lb bags, but a few 2 lbs bags as well. I would also recommend adding any fat at this time, again to avoid the freezing and thawing. We used 10% beef suet on some of our burger and left some without any fat added. I will try to post back on here and let you guys know any difference in taste and cooking methods used because of this. By vacuum sealing everything, you also avoid freezer burn that can happen without doing that. The chunks of meat that we put in garbage bags iced up very quick and would have eventually gotten freezer burned.
Tip #3: Cut all steaks and roasts into whatever portion you would consume at one meal before freezing them.
When we got back, I just vacuum sealed the back-straps into large packs and got them into the freezer. I will now have to thaw them to cut them into an appropriate portion and re-freeze the rest.
This is all I\'ve got for now. Who else has tips or tricks that they use? This is a learning process for sure, but it\'s a lot of fun as well!
We brought the elk back quartered, skinned, in game bags and in then in some large coolers. We also had a separate bag for the back-straps and tenderloins. The day after we got back, we de-bonded the meat, cleaned it all up, and cut it into chunks that would fit into our grinder. We decided to throw all of those chunks into a couple of garbage bags and freeze the meat until we could get back around to it. At the same time, we also de-bonded the quarters from my antelope that I had shot the weekend before. I had vacuum sealed those quarters and put them into the freezer.
Tip #1: Do not freeze whole quarters and do not freeze a big bag of chunked meat unless you have to.
This is because I had to thaw the antelope quarters just to de-bone them. We then had to thaw the chunked up meat just to grind it up. This leads to freezing, thawing, freezing, thawing, etc. In a perfect scenario, my suggestion would be to de-bone the meat as soon as possible to avoid freezing the quarters.
Tip #2: Once it is de-boned, I would suggest grinding everything and weighing it out into packs to vacuum seal before freezing the meat.
This is obviously only for the meat that will be turned into burger, sausage, jerky, etc. At that same time, you can take any roasts or steaks and vacuum seal those as well. By weighing out the packages, you also avoid freezing, thawing, and freezing again. Weigh anything that is to be made into jerky or sausage into five pound bags since most of the seasoning kits out there are for five pounds at a time. That way you can remove a bag, thaw it, and get to work making jerky or sausage. You can weigh the burger into whatever size bags you would expect to cook at one time. We did mainly 1 lb bags, but a few 2 lbs bags as well. I would also recommend adding any fat at this time, again to avoid the freezing and thawing. We used 10% beef suet on some of our burger and left some without any fat added. I will try to post back on here and let you guys know any difference in taste and cooking methods used because of this. By vacuum sealing everything, you also avoid freezer burn that can happen without doing that. The chunks of meat that we put in garbage bags iced up very quick and would have eventually gotten freezer burned.
Tip #3: Cut all steaks and roasts into whatever portion you would consume at one meal before freezing them.
When we got back, I just vacuum sealed the back-straps into large packs and got them into the freezer. I will now have to thaw them to cut them into an appropriate portion and re-freeze the rest.
This is all I\'ve got for now. Who else has tips or tricks that they use? This is a learning process for sure, but it\'s a lot of fun as well!