DevonRifle
Well-Known Member
If you want to improve your butchering skill YouTube is your friend. You’ll find skinning videos as well.
Looked at video on YouTube- gambrel is a new technique for me, people don’t use it in the country I came from, probably because we do everything on the ground. However, I can see how fast it is and definitely adopting new techniqueBuying a pot to boil bones in sounds like a false economy to me. Try weighing the difference between the amount of meat you can trim off quickly versus getting off every last scrap. It's insignifiant against the cost of this plan.
That's taking a hell of a long time to prep, you ought to be able to halve the time quite easily as you get more practice. Do you have a gambrel you can hang from while skinning? Only a few quid. Or maybe a better knife or chopping board?
I watched these two videos and see that butcher simply throughs bones away, while I try taking out the last pieces of meat from them
Sorry for the topic, I see it was a cultural misunderstanding
And, thank you for the advice on the gambrel - I will use it from now on not only for gralloching, but also for skinning and butchering
Yes, this is what I am looking at the moment on sale - sick and tired going through the ribs. Still,it won't help me with some bones as I want to make burgers and sausages
Take the shins off at their joints that way the whole leg will be half the length and cook separately.My freezers are bursting with meat because I don't want to through away bones with meat. I don't have dogs either
What I want to do is to cut off meat and then boil bones so that I remove meat and eat it separately unless you might suggest some other idea how to remove meat on bones, and keep the rest of the meat without bones for steaks, burgers or sausages
What size pot would you recommend buying? I think it should be wide enough, maybe even oblong shape - in the past, I remember my mother had an oblong pot specifically to bake whole goose, but I did not see such pots on the market, they might fit long bones, ribs, spine...
Thanks

Honestly , take a course ( there are quite a few who offer this ) BDS regionally often run these , or find someone around you who can show you how to do the butchery side of things one to one, check out online videos on u-tube etc Nine hours for three roe is a crazy long time. If you could skin it a small independent butcher might turn the carcass into the cuts you require ? Though by rights they shouldn't really many will for cash or a half shareI can, but I am conscious of time - I went hunting last Sunday, got up around 4:00AM, came home around 20:00 with 3 roe deers and was busy prepping carcasses until 5:00AM. And I had to wake up at 8:30 because of work (good that I worked from home and could take naps).
I need to do things quicker. I guess I will next time skin the carcasses, cut in two and put in the fridge for the next day
However, I still need to save time and butcher faster as sleep deprivation is not easy as I get older
I think that 3 hours for a total novice to fully butcher a roe deer is actually pretty good. Any fool can chop up a deer into random bits in double quick time, but the OP is clearly aiming for a high standard of butchery with minimal waste. I bet there aren't many members of this site who are capable of butchering a deer in under 3 hours, if that includes skinning it, vac-packing and labelling all the meat, and cleaning up afterwards.Honestly , take a course ( there are quite a few who offer this ) BDS regionally often run these , or find someone around you who can show you how to do the butchery side of things one to one, check out online videos on u-tube etc Nine hours for three roe is a crazy long time. If you could skin it a small independent butcher might turn the carcass into the cuts you require ? Though by rights they shouldn't really many will for cash or a half share
Well tbf you have not been in the larder with me to be able to judge ! I have worked with folks a lot faster and better than me that's for sure but then i have also been at this a fair while and can keep pace with most . One thing i dont try to do is go between ribs etc its not time effective for the result . Many dealers will tell that once your past the saddle and haunches your just saving on the waste disposal costs . I do however do the shoulders and neck so long as they aint got bullet damage.I think that 3 hours for a total novice to fully butcher a roe deer is actually pretty good. Any fool can chop up a deer into random bits in double quick time, but the OP is clearly aiming for a high standard of butchery with minimal waste. I bet there aren't many members of this site who are capable of butchering a deer in under 3 hours, if that includes skinning it, vac-packing and labelling all the meat, and cleaning up afterwards.
The mistake the OP made was to attempt to tackle 3 deer in one push with limited experience and inadequate equipment. He's had some good advice on this thread, and his subsequent attempts will be better.
As for removing meat from the bones, unless you actually want to boil them up for stock then all you need is a flexible boning knife. In fact, that's all you need to butcher a whole roe, full stop.
A tip that I always remember, which I think came from @Freeforester originally, is "keep the red bits and bin the white bits". In other words, only clean bone should be going in your waste pile, and it can be got plenty clean enough with a knife.
Well that's a clear difference for a start: You're not trying to minimise waste or get as much value off a carcass as possible. Your just cutting it up. Anyone can do that quickly, with minimal skill.Well tbf you have not been in the larder with me to be able to judge ! I have worked with folks a lot faster and better than me that's for sure but then i have also been at this a fair while and can keep pace with most . One thing i dont try to do is go between ribs etc its not time effective for the result . Many dealers will tell that once your past the saddle and haunches your just saving on the waste disposal costs . I do however do the shoulders and neck so long as they aint got bullet damage.
I do not sell butchered venison though , i give it away ! If i dont need it for the dogs or house
Come off it you have no idea of my skill level at all . Just cutting it up ? Yeah that's what everyone does master butcher to rank beginner. What i am doing is looking towards the Value and quality . To be honest i chuck wood on the fire i dont like the look of in the workshop , nobody wants sending rubbish . Time is mans most valuable possession . Some might serve up the ribs of a squirrel but that's sure as heck not me.Well that's a clear difference for a start: You're not trying to minimise waste or get as much value off a carcass as possible. Your just cutting it up. Anyone can do that quickly, with minimal skill.
Sounds to me like your just going for the easy option, and to hell with the rest. That's not butchery. That's hacking it apart.Come off it you have no idea of my skill level at all . Just cutting it up ? Yeah that's what everyone does master butcher to rank beginner. What i am doing is looking towards the Value and quality . To be honest i chuck wood on the fire i dont like the look of in the workshop , nobody wants sending rubbish . Time is mans most valuable possession . Some might serve up the ribs of a squirrel but that's sure as heck not me.
My local butchers are very successful but they didn't get there throwing any old junk in the mincer . When folks want venison they want the quality not the quantity not a few extra ounces of tarted up rubbish . Commercial venison processors often enough only really look at the saddle and haunches if there is any damage or when there is a lot of beasts hung up ! If i was a buyer i would be in there with my chequebook at that time not when they are down to the dogmeat bits and taking a few once from between the ribs
Quality over quantity & time efficiency imo.
Nisbets do great pots and commercial grade tins but not cheap.My freezers are bursting with meat because I don't want to through away bones with meat. I don't have dogs either
What I want to do is to cut off meat and then boil bones so that I remove meat and eat it separately unless you might suggest some other idea how to remove meat on bones, and keep the rest of the meat without bones for steaks, burgers or sausages
What size pot would you recommend buying? I think it should be wide enough, maybe even oblong shape - in the past, I remember my mother had an oblong pot specifically to bake whole goose, but I did not see such pots on the market, they might fit long bones, ribs, spine...
Thanks
Mixing up your gross sales with net / net profit there obviously but then you are a farmer so its totally forgivable . That's a heck of a lot of rib bottoms and blood shot trimmed up shoulders !Sounds to me like your just going for the easy option, and to hell with the rest. That's not butchery. That's hacking it apart.
Why wouldn't you want to maximise the output of a carcass? It seems pretty dumb not to.
Recently, I spent a week dealing with seven carcasses. No doubt you consider that a ridiculous waste of time.
It was 3 days butchering (and not much went in the bin, believe me!), one day doing burgers & sausages, one day packing and labelling, and two days stood behind a market stall selling it. I took over £2,600 for those seven deer, and a significant proportion of that revenue came from the bits that you'd have chucked to the dogs.