Dried Venison

Started by jaeger, November 22, 2006, 09:47:55 PM

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jaeger

Here are some pictures of the venison I am curing to make Dried Venison. This is the venison version of  Dried Beef. This was the first deer of the year and about the right size of batch that I wanted to make. I have been wanting to try this for a long time so here goes!!!
I used a brown sugar cure. I pumped them each and then rubbed them with cure.  They will stay refrigerated for 7 days. I will then rinse and soak for 2 hours. I am going to smoke for 3 hours with pecan and have the Bradley temp at 175f.
If these are as big a hit as I think they will be, I will use the Reveo to tumble the meat next time. I wanted to make the first batch this way so other hunters or smokers interested in making dried beef can make this without using the Reveo.
I will post pictures of the finished product next week when completed. 








owrstrich

anxiously awaiting the dried beast of the highway...

or would that be skunk...

you gotta eat...

owrstrich
i am johnny owrstrich... i disapprove of this post...

MRH

Jaeger,

I will be waiting to see the results too.  You got me interested the other night on the chat.  I am glad to see the pictures.

Mark

jaeger

#3
Quote from: owrstrich on November 23, 2006, 03:50:37 AM
anxiously awaiting the dried beast of the highway...

or would that be skunk...

you gotta eat...

owrstrich

You probably thought I forgot about the highway beast. Not quite, I had a major set back during this project but I now have the end results.

Here is a picture of the dried venison after slicing.

Habanero Smoker

Glad to see you back on the boards. Can't wait to see the final results.



     I
         don't
                   inhale.
  ::)

jaeger

Thank you Hab!

Here are some pictures of a dried venison spread that we used on crackers. I sliced the dried venison  thin with a slicer and than put it in a food processor and chopped very fine. I mixed 1/2 cream cheese and 1/2 sour cream with a small amout of seasoning salt and added the chopped dried venison.
It turned out good and had a nice mild smoke flavor as well.
( I set a container on my neighbors table and he could smell the smoke right away! )

Here are the pictures.






West Coast Kansan

oh my, that looks way to good to post! my my...

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NOW THAT'S A SMOKED OYSTER (and some scallops)

coyote

Look'in good ! Can't wait to see the finished product. I'm gonna try my hand at this.

                                                               Coyote

Habanero Smoker

I'm with coyote; I'm going to have to try this also. This looks real good. What cut of beef would you suggest?



     I
         don't
                   inhale.
  ::)

Wildcat

Life is short. Smile while you still have teeth.



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jaeger

Thanks for the feedback! I am happy with the results.
There is a lot more a hunter can do with deer than make chislic ::)
Especially when you own a Bradley!!!


Quote from: Habanero Smoker on January 08, 2007, 02:47:34 AM
I'm with coyote; I'm going to have to try this also. This looks real good. What cut of beef would you suggest?


I would use an eye of round or a bottom round. With either choice you will want to uniformly inject the muscle with cure and use a rub on the outside as well. When I mix the water/cure I tend to go lighter on the amount of cure(salt) than it recommends. The mix I used called for 2# cure per gallon of water. I used 1.75# of cure to one gallon (equivilant/I didn't need a full gallon for the pump brine).
The venison was not to salty and it had a nice even cure. No cure spots.

( I would also increase the cure time to 10 days, especially if the muscle is large/thick/big).

Habanero Smoker

Thanks for the recipe. I'm sure I will be trying this in about two weeks. I may cut the bottom round into smaller cuts before applying the dry cure.



     I
         don't
                   inhale.
  ::)

bunnydude

I have a buddy that is going to give me a Elk roast to try and dry do you think this will work out as well as your venison? ;D

Wildcat

Welcome to the forum bunnydude!  Keep up posted on this one.  I personally have never had elk, being a southerner and all.  Is it similiar to deer?
Life is short. Smile while you still have teeth.



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bunnydude

No Elk is in a world of its own. To me it tastes and has the texture of prime grade angus beef. I am a cook going on 25 years and have been very fortunate to be able to cook Moose,Blacktail deer, Muledeer, caribou, and bear meat.  ;D

I have only smoked deer and various upland game such as ringnecks, grouse and chukar. Elk is hard to come by I have been hunting them for about 12 years and have only had a handfull of shots so when I get a roast or some steaks I treat them like gold. ;D

So if you get the chance to try Elk I highly suggest you do. ;D

It was nice meeting you ;D

B.dude