Ossie 11 Posted May 11, 2007 Report Share Posted May 11, 2007 I noticed a lot of topics asking the same questions about hanging, so i thought i'd get my arse in gear & type a guide up. i lifted this from a book i have, called "The Sporting Wife - Game and Fish Cooking". The book was published in 1971, so some of the game listed below is off the menu, but i have included them for curiosity value (and roadkill is still a legal eat ). I hope this is helpful: Hanging The real purpose of hanging game is to enable the fibres of the flesh to break down and decompose so that the meat will be more tender. It is very difficult to give exact times as it depends entirely on personal taste. Some prefer slightly tougher meat with a fresh taste, while others enjoy very tender meat with a decidedly 'high' smell and flavour. These times therefore are only very approximate, and are for average seasonable temperatures. If the weather is hotter than average, hang for the shortest length of time given, and if colder than usual, for the longest. The older the game, the longer it must hang. Birds are ready for cooking when the tail, inside leg, or breast feathers can be plucked out easily. Game birds are always hung by the neck (although some say you should hang a pheasant by its feet, until the body drops!). Overhung flesh will have blueish patches on it. Game should always be hung in a shaded place in a current of air, well out of the reach of cats, dogs or foxes. Partridge: 5-12 days Pheasant: 3 days to 2 weeks Grouse: 3-10 days Blackcock: 3-4 days Ptarmigan: 3-4 days Capercaillie: Bury it in the ground for a few days, or hang it until it is really tender. Pigeon: 2-3 days Quail: Can be eaten straight away, or hung for up to 2 days Woodcock And Snipe: Can be eaten straight away, or kept for up to 6 days, but remember that woodcock and snipe are often cooked with the entrails left in them, so They shouldn't be left too long. Wild Duck (Mallard, Teal, Widgeon, etc): can be eaten straight away, or hung up to 2 days. If left any longer the flesh is liable to turn rank. Wild Goose: 1-2 days Hare: About 1 week without paunching, a little longer in cold weather. Suspend it by the hind feet with a bucket under the nose to catch the blood, which makes good gravy. Rabbit: Eat straight away, with no hanging. Venison: 3 days to 2 weeks. There is a great deal of difference between these times, but apart from taste, it depends on many factors. A young roe deer in perfect condition will only need about 3 days, while a tough old fallow or red deer could need a good 2 weeks to make it tender. For the average taste, test the hung meat every day by running a skewer into the haunch.So long as the skewer has no unpleasant smell when withdrawn the meat is in good condition, but if it does get rather too "high", wash it in warm water and dry it well before cooking. If there is no fly-free larder available, rub the carcase with a mixture of flour, powdered ginger, and pepper. The furrow of the backbone should be well dressed with pepper. Wrap the carcase in muslin before hanging in the larder, but inspect it every day and give it a fresh coating of flour and ginger when necessary. Wipe with a cloth to remove any moisture which may have formed. 9 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Guest peter Posted May 11, 2007 Report Share Posted May 11, 2007 well in ossie. i have put that in my pm Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Smokoe 2 Posted May 3, 2008 Report Share Posted May 3, 2008 (edited) You'll have a maggot farm not a larder. Get em gutted , dressed and in the oven / freezer. Edited May 4, 2008 by Smokoe 2 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
FJager 0 Posted May 4, 2008 Report Share Posted May 4, 2008 Great post Ossie, cheers. Tender stretch hanging we call it, in most parts of Australia north of Victoria and southern NSW's the weather is too warm during the day, even in winter, to be able to hang meat successfully without refrigeration, you guys have a truly remarkable climate over there that lends itself to being able to hang and cure game meat outside refrigeration. I have heard of pheasant being hung until it falls off the hook, I would love to eat some of this. Thanks again for the post, any recipes by chance? Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Kaya 0 Posted August 13, 2008 Report Share Posted August 13, 2008 You'll have a maggot farm not a larder. Get em gutted , dressed and in the oven / freezer. generally use a fly / mozzy net over the quarry to stop them becoming fly blown... am i right in thinking that most people over here in the UK use fridges now to to hang smaller prey anyway? Quote Link to post Share on other sites
bosco 3 Posted November 20, 2008 Report Share Posted November 20, 2008 do u leave the guts in it i tried it with a hare and when i gutted it .it was green and smell really bad. can you explian to me please what way is should look etc thanks 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
kobidog 1 Posted December 15, 2008 Report Share Posted December 15, 2008 You said that gamebirds are alwways hung by the neck but some prefer to hang by the feet, i have a brace hanging by the feet at the moment.Should i hang them by the neck? thanks Greg Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Jim Grant 4 Posted December 15, 2008 Report Share Posted December 15, 2008 Birds always hang by the beak. Hares, rabbits in fact anything without feathers, hand by their hind legs. I leave Feather for a couple of days without dressing them. Everything else I would draw, gut, paunch and gralloch. I never put feather into the freezer without plucking and dressing them. Thats my preference, choose for yourself. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
hatjoepeg 2 Posted May 22, 2009 Report Share Posted May 22, 2009 Great post Ossie, cheers. Tender stretch hanging we call it, in most parts of Australia north of Victoria and southern NSW's the weather is too warm during the day, even in winter, to be able to hang meat successfully without refrigeration, you guys have a truly remarkable climate over there that lends itself to being able to hang and cure game meat outside refrigeration. I have heard of pheasant being hung until it falls off the hook, I would love to eat some of this. Thanks again for the post, any recipes by chance? This will work in both the oven or slow cooker. Take an oven prepared goose (greylag, canada), best if you have shot and prepared the bird yourself, and place on a house brick in cooker. Add 2 lemons to the birds cavity and 1/2 lb shallotts to the pan and cover with foil. Leave on a medium heat for about 5 hours taking the foil off after 4 hours and remove some of the juices and put to one side. After the last hour remove from the oven, throw away the goose and eat the brick with some of the reserved stock. 1 1 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
steviemann 5 Posted August 10, 2009 Report Share Posted August 10, 2009 Birds always hang by the beak. Hares, rabbits in fact anything without feathers, hand by their hind legs. I leave Feather for a couple of days without dressing them. Everything else I would draw, gut, paunch and gralloch. I never put feather into the freezer without plucking and dressing them. Thats my preference, choose for yourself. Can't remember where I read it, waterfowl should be hung by the feet. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Twitch738 0 Posted August 15, 2009 Report Share Posted August 15, 2009 would you hang pigeon with the guts inside or take them out first? Quote Link to post Share on other sites
dogger 100 Posted November 13, 2009 Report Share Posted November 13, 2009 would you hang pigeon with the guts inside or take them out first? by the neck guts in Quote Link to post Share on other sites
tango 221 Posted January 12, 2010 Report Share Posted January 12, 2010 Great post Ossie, cheers. Tender stretch hanging we call it, in most parts of Australia north of Victoria and southern NSW's the weather is too warm during the day, even in winter, to be able to hang meat successfully without refrigeration, you guys have a truly remarkable climate over there that lends itself to being able to hang and cure game meat outside refrigeration. I have heard of pheasant being hung until it falls off the hook, I would love to eat some of this. Thanks again for the post, any recipes by chance? This will work in both the oven or slow cooker. Take an oven prepared goose (greylag, canada), best if you have shot and prepared the bird yourself, and place on a house brick in cooker. Add 2 lemons to the birds cavity and 1/2 lb shallotts to the pan and cover with foil. Leave on a medium heat for about 5 hours taking the foil off after 4 hours and remove some of the juices and put to one side. After the last hour remove from the oven, throw away the goose and eat the brick with some of the reserved stock. THATS ABOUT RIGHT MATE ,,,,,GREAT :clapper: :clapper: Quote Link to post Share on other sites
snorker 2 Posted January 15, 2010 Report Share Posted January 15, 2010 ME FATHER WOULD HANG PHESEANTS BRACED TRADITIONALLY BY THE NECK FOR TWO/THREE WEEKS, OR AS LONG AS HE DARED. THEN COOKED SLOWLY IN ROASTING BAGS, WE WERE BROUGHT UP ON THEM, HENS COOK BETTER, Quote Link to post Share on other sites
allen 2 Posted January 31, 2010 Report Share Posted January 31, 2010 The old rule in ''The Gower'' [ Wales ]is to hang game one week before Christmas and two weeks after. Myself, the quicker I can get them plucked / gutted and in the freezer the better. 2 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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