Biltong.

What about storage and shelf life? Does it count as a raw meat product or a cooked meat product? If it's vac packed, does it have to be frozen or will it keep in the fridge, and if so for how long?
It would be a cured product, like prosciutto or salami. You certainly don’t want to use enough heat to cook it. I don’t usually even keep it in the fridge. It’s fine for a few weeks. I doubt vacuum packing would be necessary, unless you wanted to keep it months in the fridge.
Re. Mould. White mould is fine, I wipe it off with a cloth soaked in vinegar as soon as I see any. Black mould is bad. Throw it. You need to keep things clean as possible during preparation. Bent paper clips are good for hanging it up, will try to find some photos
I haven’t given it to a teething child, but my daughter loved it from the age of 2 or 3. It shouldn’t really have mould on it, and it’s easy enough to avoid, unless your part of Wales is really excessively humid.
Boerewors even more delicious - you should consider trying to make some of that. I never tried because wife and daughter always wolf the stuff down like dinosaurs.
 
Do you not remove the silver skin?
Nope, by the time its dried these sort crumble away. They add bite if you are gnawing away on large sticks, and not noticeable if sliced.

I do though ten to split out the individual muscles and the slice those. Some of the smaller ones just open up and butterfly.

Re flies and spicing - you do want a good coating of spice and the black pepper keeps the flies away. You need plenty of airflow.

As for long term storage, keep it dry. If you put in a box, plastic tub it goes mouldy. Remember in Africa it was and is food for the times of need, and also travel food.

You can actually use biltongue rehydrated to make stews etc.

If you are going to keep it long time add some salt petre or other antioxidant to the mix - most commercial makers do this.

I find though biggest problem is keeping it longer than a week - you will find lots of two legged pests arrive at your door - just popped round to see you…..
 
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What about storage and shelf life? Does it count as a raw meat product or a cooked meat product? If it's vac packed, does it have to be frozen or will it keep in the fridge, and if so for how long?
according to my local butcher who wanted to stock and sell it required a segregated counter, scales and cutting surfaces from the meat, so wasn't viable for him to sell. Draw from that what you will.

In terms of drying, I made a box with a bulb, PC fan and led driver and some fly screen.
The coriander, salt, pepper mix is good, add mild chilli to flavour.
I give it a vinegar bath before adding seasoning and don't tend to get any mould but then it doesn't last long.
 
Simple

1/3 coriander seed
1/3 black pepper
1/3 salt plus a touch more.

Grind together - but keep reasonably course.

Take one deer. Cut meat into strips about 1cm thick by 4 or 5 wide, along the grain

Lay in a dish sprinkle over spice mix, add another layer and add more spice. You want meat covered on all sides.

Poor over some red wine - the more vinegary the better.

Leave to marinade for a few hours.

Hang up in an airy place. I have a string high up across the kitchen where breeze from window can cross the biltongue.
Leave for a few days to dry.
I used this, works a dream. Very simple. The coriander and salt keeps any flys away (and we get lots of flys this time of year).
 
I made my biltong box with a plastic storage tub, some wooden dowel, and a USB computer fan. Mineral oil on the wood to seal it, and a few holes drilled at the opposite end for ventilation. I also added a lightbulb holder for a wee bit of additional heat if needed. Works really well.


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Another question:
I'm planning on drying it in the bottom oven of the Rayburn, with the door left partly open. It's not high enough to hang the strips though, so I was planning on laying them on a grid (eg, stainless steel cooling rack). Will that be OK?
I've got some in the marinade now, and it's looking good so far!
 
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