44hunter45
Well-known member
I'm doing a kitchen experiment. I'm looking to increase how much of a kill I put to use.
I am rendering out the fat from my cow elk taken in August. The process is like doing beef or pork, except you have to wash the product down a couple of times with boiling water. I do this in a triple boiler (Soup pot with two nested colanders. ) You then reduce what is in the bottom of the soup pot. I pour it into a large glass bowl and let it settle. On top you get beautiful white tallow for bullet casting, soap, candles, etc. In the bottom you get collagen gel. In the middle you get something like bone broth.
What I'm left with is a mash of mixed meat protein and softened gristle/sinew. Unspiced, it has a bitter aftertaste. Color wise, it's an unappealing "greige". Playing with sausage spices, I can make it tasty really good. I reminds me of liverwurst color and texture wise, but tastes like breakfast sausage.
Historically, I have reground this into patties of dog food. But we are dog bereft at the moment. I'm sitting on a few pounds of this by-product.
Has anyone gone this far and tried stuffing something like this? I'm thinking I could make an interesting elkwurst.
I am rendering out the fat from my cow elk taken in August. The process is like doing beef or pork, except you have to wash the product down a couple of times with boiling water. I do this in a triple boiler (Soup pot with two nested colanders. ) You then reduce what is in the bottom of the soup pot. I pour it into a large glass bowl and let it settle. On top you get beautiful white tallow for bullet casting, soap, candles, etc. In the bottom you get collagen gel. In the middle you get something like bone broth.
What I'm left with is a mash of mixed meat protein and softened gristle/sinew. Unspiced, it has a bitter aftertaste. Color wise, it's an unappealing "greige". Playing with sausage spices, I can make it tasty really good. I reminds me of liverwurst color and texture wise, but tastes like breakfast sausage.
Historically, I have reground this into patties of dog food. But we are dog bereft at the moment. I'm sitting on a few pounds of this by-product.
Has anyone gone this far and tried stuffing something like this? I'm thinking I could make an interesting elkwurst.
