When to eat deer meat.
#1
Spike
Thread Starter
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: Graham, North Carolina
Posts: 2
When to eat deer meat.
So I heard the other day, for the first time, that if you kill a deer early in the season, or before it gets cold, that you should keep the meat in the fridge for at least a year before eating it due to the parasites that are attached to the deer and could transmit disease and junk to the deer blood stream. Is there any truth to that or what?
#2
So I heard the other day, for the first time, that if you kill a deer early in the season, or before it gets cold, that you should keep the meat in the fridge for at least a year before eating it due to the parasites that are attached to the deer and could transmit disease and junk to the deer blood stream. Is there any truth to that or what?
I've eaten bowkills, fresh, as early as the middle of September, and pig meat fresh-killed in July.
I'd say just cook it properly.
#4
The parasites you are talking about are there all year long. If you will talk to your butcher guy, he'll tell you that he will let that deer hang in the cooler for atleast 48-72 hours. That takes care of all that. He will let the hide stay on the animal during this time and the parasite will go to the hide. This is always done, if your butcher is worth his salt he'll let'em hang for a little. This has been told to me from numerous butchers and advised.
#6
#9
Giant Nontypical
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 5,425
You heard wrong...
What do these people think the settlers ate during the summer months when they had no refrigeration??? How about the Native Americans???
I've eaten deer meat for over 50 years, never had any problems...
The first piece that gets eaten is the tenderloin, often from the deer to the skillet...
What do these people think the settlers ate during the summer months when they had no refrigeration??? How about the Native Americans???
I've eaten deer meat for over 50 years, never had any problems...
The first piece that gets eaten is the tenderloin, often from the deer to the skillet...
#10
Typical Buck
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 608
The parasites you are talking about are there all year long. If you will talk to your butcher guy, he'll tell you that he will let that deer hang in the cooler for atleast 48-72 hours. That takes care of all that. He will let the hide stay on the animal during this time and the parasite will go to the hide. This is always done, if your butcher is worth his salt he'll let'em hang for a little. This has been told to me from numerous butchers and advised.
Most processing places want deer with the hide left on the deer. The reason is most people end up getting a lot of hair on the meat when they skin it themselves. The processing places use a hide puller to pull the hide off the deer.
When they do beef, I bet they don't quarter or halve the beef with the hide on it. Beef is killed, gutted, skinned, halved or quartered and hung to cool and age.
Reasons for hanging meat is to let the meat cool, age and tenderize. In the first few hours, the meat will get tougher. However, as the meat hangs and ages, the muscle tissue changes due to bacteria; and the meat becomes more tender. Aged meat will also have a different flavor.
I would not eat anything that had been in the fridge for a year.