Carcass Efficiency - Meat Yield

@theroedeerguy

Well-Known Member
Wondering if anyone has taken the time to weigh out what sort of meat yield their butchery has achieved.

For example, say a 15kg larder weight Roe deer carcass in its jacket, head and feet off.

Once skinned and boned out what sort of meat yield have you managed 7-8 kg?
 
Wondering if anyone has taken the time to weigh out what sort of meat yield their butchery has achieved.

For example, say a 15kg larder weight Roe deer carcass in its jacket, head and feet off.

Once skinned and boned out what sort of meat yield have you managed 7-8 kg?
My best so far was 6kg from a cwd.
That’s haunches boned out but kept whole, loins and fillets trimmed and cleaned and larger shoulder muscles cut for stewing and everything else minced.
 
Think I had between 7-8kg off of a H/L shot roe buck that was 16.5kg larder weight. Both shoulders were knackered with bone splintering etc and as my daughter eats it as well I didn't want to take the risk
 
A fallow doe with a larder weight of 36kg (guts out, head & legs off, skin on) will yield about 20kg of saleable meat (all boned out).

For budgeting purposes, you can roughly assume that the larder weight in kg, multiplied by 10, will give you the approximate retail value in £s of the butchered carcass.
(So a 36kg larder weight doe retails at around £360).
That formula seems to work fairly accurately with fallow and reds. Not tried it with other species.

(Obviously the return on the carcass goes up if you do further processing, such as burgers, sausages etc).
 
I butchered a yearling buck just last weekend.

It was lardered at 10.8kg, hung in the jacket for 8 days to dry before skinning and yielded around 5.5kg meat.

In all likelihood I might have done a little better except for the fact that I am to butchery what Ghengis Khan was to international relations...
 
Wondering if anyone has taken the time to weigh out what sort of meat yield their butchery has achieved.

For example, say a 15kg larder weight Roe deer carcass in its jacket, head and feet off.

Once skinned and boned out what sort of meat yield have you managed 7-8 kg?
No one yet has mentioned the Fallow Fat weight, a farmer had a 80kg dressed Buck I shot for him, 15kg of fat they cut and weighed! So starting off at 65kg less the hide and bones weight.
The last MJ i weighed was 25lb in the fur with 4 legs and b/straps were 11lb as my friends wife likes to roast one haunch on the bone and chop up the rest.
 
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