Hanging/Maturing Meat
Author
Discussion

RonnieP

Original Poster:

1,153 posts

250 months

Monday 22nd December 2008
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How do you do this? Where is this done? for how long and at what temperature?

benmc

546 posts

271 months

Tuesday 23rd December 2008
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Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall's Meat book has loads of stuff on this

http://www.amazon.co.uk/River-Cottage-Meat-Book/dp...


Whoozit

3,865 posts

292 months

Tuesday 23rd December 2008
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Depends which meat and what facilities you have. I've hung pheasant, pigeon and partridge very successfully for a week in an unheated garage with luckily cold weather, and pluck and draw them immediately prior to cooking.

SwanJack

1,949 posts

295 months

Tuesday 23rd December 2008
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Whoozit said:
Depends which meat and what facilities you have. I've hung pheasant, pigeon and partridge very successfully for a week in an unheated garage with luckily cold weather, and pluck and draw them immediately prior to cooking.
Game birds can be hung for a very long length of time, as long as its about 5 degrees where your hanging them. A friend who I used to go shooting with, swore that pheasant was ready for the pot only when the maggots had appeared. I used to hang mine for about a 2/3 weeks. I found skinning them was easier than plucking. I found that rabbits didn't last as long.

Edited by SwanJack on Tuesday 23 December 13:11

dcw@pr

3,516 posts

266 months

Tuesday 23rd December 2008
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just eaten two partridge which were INCREDIBLE - had hung for 10 days. It has been quite warm here for the last week, so in colder weather they could have gone for longer.

you can age a big joint of beef outside for weeks/months and just cut off the mouldy bits when you are ready to eat it (assuming it is cold enough)

lockhart flawse

2,089 posts

258 months

Wednesday 24th December 2008
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If you are refering to beef, which apart from game is the only meat that is aged for significant periods, then the carcass is hung for upto about 28-30 days, depending on the fat cover, in a chiller at a constant temperature of about 2 degrees C.

L.F.