Safe Handling & Preparation of Wild Game: A Comprehensive Guide
One of the benefits of hunting is bringing home the meat. Hunting and filling your freezer with wild game is a great idea. Take precautions to make sure the meat is properly cleaned, stored, and preserved for cooking. Handle wild game meat safely and enjoy a variety of exotic meals.
Instructions
Wear rubber gloves when gutting and cleaning the insides out of the wild animal. Use a solution of 50/50 bleach water to clean all knives or saws used when cutting through the spinal cord or neck of the animal.
Keep the rubber gloves on when removing the hide, or skin of the animal. Use a clean sharp knife, and remove any hair, dirt or debris from the carcass. When the hide is completely off, wash the carcass with water.
Cool the carcass very quickly. Find a large refrigeration unit for larger animals, and ice can be placed directly into the body cavity to speed cooling process. Allow air to circulate around the carcass by hanging it.
Wash hands with warm soapy water before handling any wild game meat. When cutting meat, remove all lymph nodes, and bones. Package and freeze game meat immediately after processing the meat.
Place frozen meat on the bottom shelf of the refrigerator for thawing. Deer carcasses can be kept in temperatures up to 50 degrees F for several days. Protect the carcass by putting it in a cheesecloth bag.
Cook all wild game meat to an internal temperature of at least 165 degrees F. Wild birds such as ducks and geese should be cooked to 170 degrees F.
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