Field Dressing Deer
Each year thousands of hunters are fortunate enough
to bag a big white-tailed deer. You enjoy the memory of successful
deer hunt each time you serve some tasty venison.
To ensure fresh, good tasting deer meat you must know what to do
when you get your deer.
By knowing how to handle your deer promptly from the field to the
cooking pan you will be able to enjoy many delicious venison dinners.
Where to start
First you must tag the deer with the temporary tag attached to your
deer permit. If you are exempt from hunting with a permit, you must
attach a homemade tag with your name and address and the date and
time the deer was killed.
Field Dressing
Field dressing-removing the deer's entrails- is not difficult, but
it is the most important step to good venison. Just roll up your
sleeves and get to it. The principle is the same as with small game.
The important things are to keep the carcass clean and to cool the
meat quickly. You will need a sharp, sturdy hunting
knife.
Preliminary Steps
Some hunters prefer to remove the scent glands on the inside of
the hind legs. This step can be omitted, but take care that the
meat does not contact the gland area. "Bleeding" or cutting
the deer's neck is not necessary. Blood removal is accomplished
by field dressing.
The
First Cut
Place the deer on its back. Starting at the anus, cut through the
skin and body wall along the center line. The center line extends
along the underside of the deer from the anus to the center of the
diaphraghm. Use your fingers to guide the knife and keep the blade
away from the stomach and intenstines. Make the first cut by keeping
the knife at a low angle and cutting only deep enough to slice through
the skin.
Continue
Cutting
Cut the length of the carcass, opening the chest cavity by cutting
through the breast bone. Cut deeply around the anus to loosen the
intestine. Split the pelvic bone by slicing through its center with
a sturdy knife or cutting through with a small saw or hand ax.
Save the Heart and Liver
The diaphragm seperates the chest and body cavities and must be
cut away. Reach inside the chest cavity and loosen the heart and
liver from connective tissues. Take along a plastic bag to put them
in if you wish to keep them.
Loosen the windpipe and gullet by cutting through them as far forward
into the neck area as you can reach.
It is Just Like a Big Rabbit
Roll the carcass on its side so you can remove the entrails. Most
of the entrails will pull away easily. Carefully cut and loosen
any connective tissues.
Cool
it Quickly
Wipe the body cavity clean and remove any remaining tissues and
damaged flesh. Prop the body cavity open by inserting a stick in
the rib cage.
The entrails should be buried, covered with leaves, or placed in
an inconspicuous place. Never field dress a deer along a roadway.
Transporting
Keep your deer clean and cool. If possible, don't haul it atop your
vehicle. Keep it away from engine fumes, heat, and dirt. Be certain
to have your deer tagged at a deer checking station.
Hang
the Deer By the Hind Legs
The carcass should be aged before skinning and processing. If the
outside temperature is in the 35 to 40 degree F range the deer can
safely hang and age for a week. If the temperature is warmer you
should skin the deer and age the meat in a refrigerator or cooler.
Skinning
Skinning is easiest when the deer is hanging by its back legs, first
cut the skin around the lower part of the back legs and slit them
on the inside, down to the pelvis. Peel the hide by pulling with
one hand and rutting the difficult places with a knife in the other
hand. Using a balled fist behind the hide and carcass helps separate
skin without tearing. Take care not to let the hair touch the meat.
When you reach the front legs, cut and skin them the same as the
rear legs.
Preserve that Trophy
If you want to have your trophy deer head mounted, take care when
you skin your deer. Leave the head and hide intact as far back as
the rear of the shoulder. Let the taxidermist do the rest of the
work. Save the remainder of the deer hide and have it tanned or
sell it to a fur buyer.
Freezing
Freezing is the best and most convenient way of preserving your
venison. Prompt freezing preserves the freshness and flavor of the
meat so it will be at its best when cooked.
Trim away the heavy fat from the meat. The fat gives venison a
strong flavor that most people do not like.
The venison can be wrapped as soon as the cuts are made. Be sure
to use wraps or packages made for freezing. These wrapping papers
or containers should prevent the passage of moisture and air into
the venison. Package the meat in appropriate sized dinner portions
for your family.
The packages should be marked telling the cut of meat in the package
and the date it was frozen. Use the venison within a year after
it has been frozen.
Additional Processing Tips
Common Sense Tips for Handling and Processing Venison
adapted from WILD Ohio
The World Health Organization has found no evidence
that CWD can infect humans. However, you should never eat a deer
that appears sick or otherwise unhealthy. Also, you should take
some general precautions when field dressing and processing wild
game.
Do not eat any part of a deer that appears to be sick
Do not eat eyes, brain, spinal cord, spleen, tonsils, or lymph
nodes of any deer
FIELD DRESSING
Wear rubber or latex gloves
Minimize contact with the brain, spinal cord, spleen, and lymph
nodes (lumps of tissue next to organs or in fat and membranes) as
you work
Remove all internal organs
Clean knives and equipment in a 50/50 solution of chlorine bleach
and water for 1 hour. Wipe down counters and let them dry
CUTTING AND PROCESSING
Wear rubber or latex gloves
Minimize handling brain or spinal tissues. If removing antlers,
use a saw designated for that purpose only, then dispose of the
blade
Do not cut through the spinal column except to remove the head.
Use a knife designated only for this purpose.
Bone out the meat from the deer and remove all fat and connective
tissue (the web-like membranes attached to the meat). This should
also remove lymph nodes.
Dispose of hide, brain and spinal cord, eyes, spleen, tonsils, bones,
and head in a landfill or by other means available in your area.
Thoroughly clean and sanitize equipment and work areas with 50
percent bleach solution after processing.
Venison (ven·i·son): Most
often associated with the meat of deer used as food, but it also
includes the meat of other large game animals such as moose, elk,
caribou, and antelope. As with the meat of other large animals,
it is eaten as steaks, roasts, sausages and ground meat. Organ meats
are sometimes eaten but would not be called venison; rather, they
are called humble, as in the phrase "humble pie". Venison
is lower in food energy, cholesterol and fat than common cuts of
beef, pork or lamb. [TOP]
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