Sapper.dawg
New member
I was skunked the final weekend of the deer season here in Alabama, so I decided to try out pressure canning some venison, wild hog and sausage patties.
This is the first time I have done this, and the canner is a Christmas gift from the wife this year. One jar of venison didn't seal, so we are eating it now. Results: if you are not preserving at least some of your game this way, you need to. The raw pack venison is fork tender with a great flavor.
We made some tacos with the canned venison that didn't seal:
Here are the jars of sausage patties prior to opening (pork on the left - notice the rendered fat in the jar):
Naked patties prior to browning (pork to the left):
And in the pan browning (venison patty on top, note the canned venison chunks browning for the tacos):
Summary: The venison patties were good. Held their flavor, and texture. The regular store bought (Tennessee Pride) sausage patties held their flavor, but had a very mushy texture.
Conclusion: The venison sausage was the clear winner here, primarily due to the texture component. I made the venison sausage with a 1:4 pork butt to venison ratio, so that was probably around 10 or 12% fat when all is said and done, and was coarse ground. I think that is why it held the texture so much better than the pork. The pork was fine ground and probably around 40% fat.
Recommendation: If you make your own pork or venison sausage, this is a great way to make breakfast more convenient and clear some freezer space. Just be sure to keep the fat to around 10% and keep the grind coarse. I put these up in half-pint jars for the test run, but those will work fine for my small crew. I will also put up a batch in wide mouth pint jars, which will allow for more and thicker patties.
This is the first time I have done this, and the canner is a Christmas gift from the wife this year. One jar of venison didn't seal, so we are eating it now. Results: if you are not preserving at least some of your game this way, you need to. The raw pack venison is fork tender with a great flavor.
We made some tacos with the canned venison that didn't seal:
Here are the jars of sausage patties prior to opening (pork on the left - notice the rendered fat in the jar):
Naked patties prior to browning (pork to the left):
And in the pan browning (venison patty on top, note the canned venison chunks browning for the tacos):
Summary: The venison patties were good. Held their flavor, and texture. The regular store bought (Tennessee Pride) sausage patties held their flavor, but had a very mushy texture.
Conclusion: The venison sausage was the clear winner here, primarily due to the texture component. I made the venison sausage with a 1:4 pork butt to venison ratio, so that was probably around 10 or 12% fat when all is said and done, and was coarse ground. I think that is why it held the texture so much better than the pork. The pork was fine ground and probably around 40% fat.
Recommendation: If you make your own pork or venison sausage, this is a great way to make breakfast more convenient and clear some freezer space. Just be sure to keep the fat to around 10% and keep the grind coarse. I put these up in half-pint jars for the test run, but those will work fine for my small crew. I will also put up a batch in wide mouth pint jars, which will allow for more and thicker patties.