Norfolk Horn
Well-Known Member
The old rule of thumb was always a third on the floor, a third in the bin and a third to eat from a live animal.
Your starting weight of 50kg, is that head/feet off skin on?I did a case study for a hind that I butchered for the estate I do the venison processing on:
50kg hind, neck shot.
12kg dice
8.5kg mince
2.5kg loin
.5kg fillet
=23.5kg all told
This wasn't me being anal about stripping all the meat off - just going as I normally would, working away but without spending over long to recover more trim for mince. I also trim all of my dicing cuts to remove as much silverskin as possible.
We did the maths and a carcass that would have sold for £100 to the game dealer we would have been able to sell in the shop for £400 or near enough. Which makes the £90/red that I charge quite reasonable.
Let alone the money we could make from selling ready meals made with the dice or mince - the margins on those were amazing. I estimated from a good hind, processing the mince/dice further for sale (curries, stews etc) would net £800 total in retail value, though of course added ingredient, labour and packaging costs must be taken into account.
head, feet and skin off ie how we'd send to the dealer.Your starting weight of 50kg, is that head/feet off skin on?
interesting, I like that.The old rule of thumb was always a third on the floor, a third in the bin and a third to eat from a live animal.
Skin off? Is that how your dealer takes them?head, feet and skin off ie how we'd send to the dealer.
*on - bit of a typo!Skin off? Is that how your dealer takes them?
From an 18kg carcass expect around 18lb in venison.Boned out an 18 kg roe buck( head shot ) last week I took the loins off and all the rest of the meat went to butcher for sausages 8.3 kg if I remember correctly but I did strip the ribs bone out the neck etc
www.outdoorlife.com
And another fallow:To compliment by roe example at post 8, this is the equivalent for my last fallow pricket. Carcass larder weight 33.6 kg, yield 15.146kg, ie 45% with a potential sale revenue of £220.44
Spookily, the yield percentage is exactly the same as for my last roeBoth were chest shots - must be the way I butcher them
View attachment 436469
That's very poor.And another fallow:
66kg (larder) buck yielded only 26.67kg of packed product (40.4%) with a retail price of £405.52 for the packaged products.
As per the other thread:That's very poor.
Was the animal carrying a lot of fat?
(ie, was there a lot of waste from the carcass?)
I would have expected a (lean) fallow of that weight to have generated retail sales somewhere between £650 and £700