Hairs on meat - any tips or tricks

After skinning and then butchering Venison, I am finding way too may hairs on the meat. I was considering using a blow torch to singe the hairs off where the skinning cuts would be.
Does anybody have any useful methods for minimising hair on the meat please?
 
After skinning and then butchering Venison, I am finding way too may hairs on the meat. I was considering using a blow torch to singe the hairs off where the skinning cuts would be.
Does anybody have any useful methods for minimising hair on the meat please?
@Norfolk Horn
Mark said to me use a kitchen (new one) with the sponge/and green side type. Not tried it yet but will do on the next one.
 
Never tried that approach.
Assuming you hang from the base of the neck?
Our Keeper does his small deer in a similar manner. Hang head up using baler twine round neck. Cut down the back along the spine then remove skin like a hospital gown. I found it surprisingly easy - once I'd got past the neck skin of an old Munty buck :worried:.
Use the blue disposable kitchen wipes as stated above.
 
This is an interesting one. The rationale being that there are no cuts at the business end of the carcass?
I modified this to a rounded tip from the "sharp" one it had, use it from reds to muntjac hanging from their hocks,
start and the front leg then all the way to the hock/gambrel. Find the sweet spot angle and it will keep going, use the back of the blade also.
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After skinning and then butchering Venison, I am finding way too may hairs on the meat. I was considering using a blow torch to singe the hairs off where the skinning cuts would be.
Does anybody have any useful methods for minimising hair on the meat please?
If there's so many hairs left on the carcass that you're considering resorting to the use of a blowtorch then there's something wrong with the way you're doing the skinning.
Address that issue first.
Always cut from the inside.
Use the "clean hand / dirty hand method".
Ensure that the skin is always falling away from exposed meat as you remove it.
Don't skin in your butchery area.
Wear a different apron or jacket for skinning.
 
A lot of people recommending wiping with a cloth, but I would caution against that. It'll certainly make the carcass look more presentable, but a lot of hairs will simply be rubbed into alignment with natural creases and fold on the surface of the carcass, rendering them almost invisible. And hairs will also be rubbed off the cloth onto parts of the carcass that weren't previously contaminated.
The only really reliable way to get rid of hairs that adhere to the meat is to pick them off one by one. There should only be a few, if the skinning was done tidily.
 
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