I did that one year. Haven't and likely won't again. Too much hassle. Much easier, IMO/E, to do the processing at home.We take our food saver vacuum packer hunting with us and process our own ASAP.Freeze it on dri ice in our 6 day Coleman cooler.
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I did that one year. Haven't and likely won't again. Too much hassle. Much easier, IMO/E, to do the processing at home.We take our food saver vacuum packer hunting with us and process our own ASAP.Freeze it on dri ice in our 6 day Coleman cooler.
NOTE: keep your hands off of the scent areas. This OIL will transfer to the meat and taint the taste. NO SCENT GLANDS TO BE TOUCHED.
good luck to al
the dog
Here is a good study on antelope meat handling. Page five offers the findings of aging. Probably still a matter of preference however, so take it for what it is worth.
http://www.wyomingextension.org/agpubs/pubs/B565R.pdf
Thanks for posting that. It reminded of one they did on elk. It turns out they have done quite a bit of stuff so I started a thread in the "after the shot" section so searches will find it easier. http://onyourownadventures.com/hunttalk/showthread.php?p=2453721#post2453721Here is a good study on antelope meat handling. Page five offers the findings of aging. Probably still a matter of preference however, so take it for what it is worth.
http://www.wyomingextension.org/agpubs/pubs/B565R.pdf
I've never hunted antelope but I'm curious as to how much fat they have compared to deer or elk and if the fat is as bitter as well. Any opinions?