Walkathon
Well-known member
Hello Everyone,
Question for all of you elk eaters out there. I don't have much experience with elk and have only shot two, both cows. The elk I shot this year was an adult cow, probably 3.5 or 4.5 old based on her body size in comparison to the rest of the group- big but not quite the biggest, and her ivories match up with 3.5yr - 4.5yr based on the online tool that Montana has for aging them...anyway to my question.
The back straps are probably the toughest I have ever eaten, including a few dozen whitetail deer and probably 6 mule deer. The round steaks, specifically the top round and sirloin are very tender and completely great to eat. I cooked them side by side on the grill to the same doneness, rare to medium rare and couldn't believe the difference. The back straps were a struggle to eat.
So, is this normal for elk back straps to be tough, as compared to the sirloin and rounds? I removed the back straps in the field, probably about 1 hour after she hit the ground and they were in a cooler for 2 days on ice afterwards along with the rest of the meat. The meat was hung in a tree overnight to cool off before I put it in a cooler. Really glad I saved the rounds for steaks/ stir fry after trying the back straps. Tenderloins were totally awesome as expected.
Just curious as to what the rest of you have found.
Question for all of you elk eaters out there. I don't have much experience with elk and have only shot two, both cows. The elk I shot this year was an adult cow, probably 3.5 or 4.5 old based on her body size in comparison to the rest of the group- big but not quite the biggest, and her ivories match up with 3.5yr - 4.5yr based on the online tool that Montana has for aging them...anyway to my question.
The back straps are probably the toughest I have ever eaten, including a few dozen whitetail deer and probably 6 mule deer. The round steaks, specifically the top round and sirloin are very tender and completely great to eat. I cooked them side by side on the grill to the same doneness, rare to medium rare and couldn't believe the difference. The back straps were a struggle to eat.
So, is this normal for elk back straps to be tough, as compared to the sirloin and rounds? I removed the back straps in the field, probably about 1 hour after she hit the ground and they were in a cooler for 2 days on ice afterwards along with the rest of the meat. The meat was hung in a tree overnight to cool off before I put it in a cooler. Really glad I saved the rounds for steaks/ stir fry after trying the back straps. Tenderloins were totally awesome as expected.
Just curious as to what the rest of you have found.