Anyone with experience curing a venison leg in the UK climate?

As in the title, I'm wondering if anyone here has experience with curing something without having a proper climate-controlled cabinet. I'm hoping there will be a recipe and method out there which can be followed for hanging up in a cool area like a garage/shed. Anyone been down this road before?

Cheers,
I have done munty and cwd legs and it works ok but you need somewhere draughty so prevent mold growth.
I did a cure based on the one on this site under the thread venison Proscuitto and it tasted great.
 
I tried one using a method on SD by member Dr Simon Jordan involving covering it in beeswax.
It was hung in the dry garage that has the CH boiler in ( in muslin) but ended up getting fly blown ????? used the rancid leg as excellent fox bait:lol:
 
I quite regularly make biltong with a hung up on a long string across the kitchen. Cut the meat thinly and it takes about four to five days to cure. I don’t how long it could last. A roe bucks worth of biltong get eaten as soon as its ready!
 
I tried one using a method on SD by member Dr Simon Jordan involving covering it in beeswax.
It was hung in the dry garage that has the CH boiler in ( in muslin) but ended up getting fly blown ????? used the rancid leg as excellent fox bait:lol:
I used the same recipe and had the same result 🙄
 
When I read this first, I thought Venison Leg was a medical condition…😆.l might give it a go for my Italian shooting mate, with a muntjac leg, but wait until daytime temperatures drop into single figures.
 
I remember my grandmother used to hang haunches in the game larder or a cool airy pantry. I know she coated them with ginger powder after they had been in the lead salting trough a few days. She was a keepers wife and there were no chillers or freezers then. Although most large country houses would have an ice house.
 
I've done several salamis where they have been hung in the garage. Currently there is a venison Proscuitto, its been hanging since march. No mold, oozing liquid or bad smell. Hopefully it will be good for Christmas. I have since read that most people remove the gland and bone - i didn't.
 
I've done several salamis where they have been hung in the garage. Currently there is a venison Proscuitto, its been hanging since march. No mold, oozing liquid or bad smell. Hopefully it will be good for Christmas. I have since read that most people remove the gland and bone - i didn't.
I didn't either. Turned out lovely
 
Hopefully it will be good for Christmas. I have since read that most people remove the gland and bone - i didn't.
The thinking (apparently) is that removing the bone prevents 'bone sour' heif the cure doesn't penetrate quickly enough. The only time I did this though, I ended up with maggots right in the centre of a 15lb pork ham 😭
 
IMG_9765.webpHere’s the roe leg I did last year. EQ cure with salt and cure 2 for a month. Then only 6 weeks drying hanging in my pantry to hit 45% weight loss - very quick as no skin on and I didn’t wax it. Any sign of black or green mould and I would take it down, wipe with red wine and return. Then 1 month in vac bag to equalise. Flavour was very good, but nothing exceptional - however it was a cool thing to take on holiday with us to Crinan (above) and carve as needed.

I should have then deboned, portioned and vac packed it but I didn’t - or maybe dipped it in wax after the EQ. It didn’t keep for too long as we ate and handled it a lot, and I noticed it was going slimy under the clingfilm in the fridge….not great.

Pantry is on external wall, ventilated and stays sub 10° from November - March, approx 70-80% humidity throughout. I’ve now got a proper curing chamber and am considering doing a fallow leg off a beast I’m butchering next week. Suspect a fat fallow would be worth doing, but I’ll have to be nice and neat skinning, and do a very long EQ cure.

Have contemplated doing a silverside from a biggg red or fallow but they’re still tiny compared to a coppa or a beef silverside.
 
View attachment 446191Here’s the roe leg I did last year. EQ cure with salt and cure 2 for a month. Then only 6 weeks drying hanging in my pantry to hit 45% weight loss - very quick as no skin on and I didn’t wax it. Any sign of black or green mould and I would take it down, wipe with red wine and return. Then 1 month in vac bag to equalise. Flavour was very good, but nothing exceptional - however it was a cool thing to take on holiday with us to Crinan (above) and carve as needed.

I should have then deboned, portioned and vac packed it but I didn’t - or maybe dipped it in wax after the EQ. It didn’t keep for too long as we ate and handled it a lot, and I noticed it was going slimy under the clingfilm in the fridge….not great.

Pantry is on external wall, ventilated and stays sub 10° from November - March, approx 70-80% humidity throughout. I’ve now got a proper curing chamber and am considering doing a fallow leg off a beast I’m butchering next week. Suspect a fat fallow would be worth doing, but I’ll have to be nice and neat skinning, and do a very long EQ cure.

Have contemplated doing a silverside from a biggg red or fallow but they’re still tiny compared to a coppa or a beef silverside.
💪
 
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