Hello, just a quick one. Why should a deer carcass be hung before being consumed? Please can someone explain to me? Cheers
Depending on how old and how stressed it was when you shot it will dictate how chewy and tasty it is. In the interests of flavour and your jaw muscles it's good to allow the meat to relax by hanging.HTML:It is possible to eat meat right away. Knock bambi over and carve a chunk off his back side and fry it up.
If you haven't got room to hang a carcass then you can break it down into quarters and chill it in fridge. I've done it this way a few times. A hanging time of 3-5 days is plenty to allow the muscle fibres to relax, I left a young doe for 24 hours and she was delicious and the last roe Buck I shot I gave him 5 days because he'd been mooching around after a doe so I imagined his testosterone and cortisol levels would have been higher so I left him longer.
Hanging meat can intesify the gamey flavour but like everything a bit of trial and error and you'll soon work out what you like. Rabbits get skinned and frozen within 24 hours, pheasants within 4 days and deer at 5 days at the minute because I haven't got the space to leave it longer. Red meat can take being hung - just look at beef the expensive cow is hung for 28days, the cheap stuff is electro stimulated straight away and cut up once the carcass has set.
I'm new to stalking and recently got my first, a young fallow doe. I was wondering if there is anything wrong with keeping the meat in a plastic bag on a shelf in a fridge rather than hanging in a fridge.
The down side I find that all meat when hung tastes to gamey for me.