Author Topic: THE 4 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO GET RID OF THE GAMEY TASTE IN WILD MEAT  (Read 986 times)

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Online Graybeard

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https://www.wideopenspaces.com/the-4-most-effective-ways-to-get-rid-of-the-gamey-taste-in-wild-meat/

Posted by Brad Smith



If you're struggling with the gamey taste in wild meat, start here.
You spend a lot of time, effort and money in going about chasing down wild game for the freezer. The last thing you want in wild meat is a gamey taste when it comes time to cook it. All is not lost if the first time you tried to eat your hard-earned meal, the gamey flavor was just too overpowering to enjoy anything. Thankfully, we've found a few kitchen hacks when it comes to cooking venison, elk or other game animals that takes those stronger flavors right out.

A lot of people love to tell you how much they hate eating wild game meat because of the overpowering flavor. When it comes down to the facts, though, they probably never actually ate a properly field-dressed animal.

On top of that, the wild game meat might not have been prepared according to traditional wild game recipes. Game meats aren't the same as beef. Unfortunately, many try to cook it the same way.

The following suggestions are true results from nothing but trial and error. My wife hates the gamey taste of venison. However, we've found a few ways around this that I'm sure will work for most other deer hunting fanatics too. If you think something tastes gamey, here's where you start to turn that around.

1. Field dressing basics

One of the biggest reasons your venison or other wild game might have a strong gamey taste starts in the field. The key to getting great-tasting game meats is to get the animal gutted and cooled as quickly as possible. The longer the animal stays in the field, overnight for example due to a bad shot, the worse it's going to taste.

Enzymes start breaking down inside the animal fairly rapidly. The warmer it is outside, the quicker this process happens. For most hunters, this is the biggest reason your meat tastes terrible.

A lot of hunters also tend to believe it's necessary to hang and bleed an animal after it's been gutted. Often these are the same hunters who always seem to be over-marinating their meals, even with grass fed beef at the summer BBQ. Simply put, a shot through the vitals that bleeds quite a bit is usually enough. It's this blood that remains in the muscles that create that overpowering, gamey taste.

If you want that gamey taste out, put more emphasis on proper cleaning and getting your deer to a professional processor or your home butchering station rather than hanging it. This is especially important with deer meat.

2. Soaking it

Here's where you'll probably get the most advice as it pertains to wild game meat. A lot of suggestions like to recommend soaking your game meat in vinegar. Seeing as vinegar is very acidic, this technique can often dry out the meat making it very tough. Instead, soaking the meat in milk or even buttermilk gets much better results with most wild animals, especially with backstraps.

For a lot of old school cooks, this is must-do step before putting any wild game meat in a slow cooker or Dutch oven. A saltwater brine is also a very popular choice. The salt helps suck a lot of the bad flavors right out. Make sure you give the meat a good clean water bath before cooking, though. Otherwise, the salt can really overpower.

Marinades are also a great way to reduce the gamey taste in wild meat. There are a variety available on the market, but something as simple as soaking it in Italian dressing can be enough. Ultimately, this helps remove more of the blood from the meat, leaving only the tissue behind. As mentioned already, that blood when it cooks is a big contributor to a strong game flavor.

3. Silver skin

Taking the time to remove the silver skin and other connective tissues before cooking will pay off dividends with gamey meat when it comes time to sit down and eat your meal. This is especially important with some game birds like pheasant, or a whitetail backstrap.

If you have a strong gamey taste in wild big game meat at your house, this very well may be the culprit, regardless of whether any of the previous strategies worked. These tissues are very strong and full of unwanted flavors. Taking the time using a small knife, or even a fork in some cases, can improve the entire cooking experience.

Removing the fat in red meat altogether is a must if people in your family have a sensitive stomach regarding wild game. In range-fed beef, the fat is a great flavor addition. In wild game, the fat doesn't do a whole lot but make your house smell and ruin your meat.

4. Don't overcook!

Overcooking wild game meat is a cardinal sin. The game taste in wild meat is actually amplified the more you cook it. Low and slow is the name of this game.

Any pan seared venison needs only a little bit of time on both sides, but medium rare should be about all the meat is cooked at the most. Seeing as there is not a whole lot of fat, game meats cook surprisingly quick. If you're doing all of the above and still getting a strong, gamey taste, this just might be why.

Again, trial and error is a great teacher when it comes to removing gaminess. If the gamey taste in wild meat turned you off to it years ago, perhaps it's time to try it again. Only this time, hopefully you can keep a few of these tricks up your sleeve.


Bill aka the Graybeard
President, Graybeard Outdoor Enterprises
256-435-1125

I am not a lawyer and do not give legal advice.

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Offline Ranger99

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Re: THE 4 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO GET RID OF THE GAMEY TASTE IN WILD MEAT
« Reply #1 on: August 18, 2021, 11:17:47 AM »
JMHO-  I've never had any gamey taste from
the animals I've personally killed and cleaned
other than hogs. Everything in this region
has to be cleaned and cooled down quickly
to avoid spoilage. You can't wag around a
deer for days like you can in the northern areas.
Deer and birds and small game get skinned
and go in the cooler ASAP.
Hogs are a different issue.  From my experience
if it has that menstrual stink either let it lay
or pull it to the back fence and let the
buzzards clean it up. I've tried several of
other people's hog stink remedies, and none
were satisfactory in the least. Waste of
valuable time
18 MINUTES.  . . . . . .

Offline O-mega

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Re: THE 4 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO GET RID OF THE GAMEY TASTE IN WILD MEAT
« Reply #2 on: August 18, 2021, 01:30:38 PM »
I age my deer, about a week or so at around 36-38 deg and have never had anyone complain about the taste of my venison.  Some argue against it, but if done properly it does make a difference IMO.
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Offline BUGEYE

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Re: THE 4 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO GET RID OF THE GAMEY TASTE IN WILD MEAT
« Reply #3 on: August 18, 2021, 02:31:23 PM »
The only big game I've tried that I just could not eat was pronghorn.
Others have told me that it's the best venison you can eat.
The pronghorn was given to us by a friend who drove to Wyoming or somewhere and drove back after killing it.
I suspect it spoiled on the trip home.
He never asked Dad or Mom how they enjoyed it, so he must have gagged at the smell like we did. :)
I've never had a wild hog, and if I get a chance to shoot one, I hope it's small enough to put in my coat pocket.
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Offline Buckskin

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Re: THE 4 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO GET RID OF THE GAMEY TASTE IN WILD MEAT
« Reply #4 on: August 18, 2021, 03:59:03 PM »
I age my deer, about a week or so at around 36-38 deg and have never had anyone complain about the taste of my venison.  Some argue against it, but if done properly it does make a difference IMO.

Oh Lord, don't get Lloyd started on aging!!!  There is a post here somewhere about aging deer that went on and on... I'm with you, if you know what you are doing aging deer you can make some fabulous fare that is 5 star restaurant quality.  Had a loin the other night that was a 2 1/2 yo buck aged 2 weeks, delicious and tender as could be.  The article was spot on how to treat game although I never soak game.
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Offline gene_225

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Re: THE 4 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO GET RID OF THE GAMEY TASTE IN WILD MEAT
« Reply #5 on: August 18, 2021, 04:41:58 PM »
Fifty plus years ago I shot a caribou out on the Alaskan peninsula. In field dressing it I managed to break the paunch, getting some of the manure on some of the meat. When my commander rotated, I paid the mess sargent to prepare some of the meat for a going away meal (he was trained as a chef). When served, I recognized it as the piece that had gotten the manure on it, but tasted fantastic. So I asked how? He said he soaked it in milk as suggested above. I've done it myself since then when I thought it might need it; never a failure.

Offline O-mega

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Re: THE 4 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO GET RID OF THE GAMEY TASTE IN WILD MEAT
« Reply #6 on: August 18, 2021, 06:26:35 PM »
I age my deer, about a week or so at around 36-38 deg and have never had anyone complain about the taste of my venison.  Some argue against it, but if done properly it does make a difference IMO.

Oh Lord, don't get Lloyd started on aging!!!  There is a post here somewhere about aging deer that went on and on... I'm with you, if you know what you are doing aging deer you can make some fabulous fare that is 5 star restaurant quality.  Had a loin the other night that was a 2 1/2 yo buck aged 2 weeks, delicious and tender as could be.  The article was spot on how to treat game although I never soak game.
Yea, seen and participated in that thread.  I still stand by my opinion, and it hasn't failed me yet. 
Fifty plus years ago I shot a caribou out on the Alaskan peninsula. In field dressing it I managed to break the paunch, getting some of the manure on some of the meat. When my commander rotated, I paid the mess sargent to prepare some of the meat for a going away meal (he was trained as a chef). When served, I recognized it as the piece that had gotten the manure on it, but tasted fantastic. So I asked how? He said he soaked it in milk as suggested above. I've done it myself since then when I thought it might need it; never a failure.
When I started hunting White Tails in NC, my friends told me about the milk.  But since we aged our venison in CO, usually by hanging in the garage where the goal was to not have it freeze, I didn't know any different so aged them too, though had to seek a storage cooler, or use ice, instead of just hanging for a few days.  Every year, for about 8 years I was stationed there, we would have deer cookouts, as I always promised my first one to my squad.  My friends would always comment on how good the venison I cooked was, even though they also provided some when it grew beyond just my squad and the whole platoon was involved.  The only difference was that they would field dress, butcher and freeze theirs on the same day while I aged mine.
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Online Lloyd Smale

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Re: THE 4 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO GET RID OF THE GAMEY TASTE IN WILD MEAT
« Reply #7 on: August 18, 2021, 11:00:49 PM »
I dont understand the gamey taste thing. Its not beef. Ifs venison. Its like trying to make pheasant taste like chicken. I like the taste of different meats. Every animal has a slightly different taste. If by gamey your talking the piss smell and flavor a big boar pig has i can see it but then theres not much you can do about that. But venison has a slightly differnt taste then beef. As does caribou elk moose and bison. Its called flavor. If you want an eye opener do like me and live off of venision burger for 10 to 11 months a year then go and buy some beef burger. Youll find it tastes almost rancid. Even my wife will attest to that. Probably sat for two weeks in the store after being aged for good week before that. So if your talking something other then the basic different taste it has your doing something wrong prepping it. I do agree that you need to properly field dress and remove anything that isnt red meat. If the guts have leaked on to the meat cut that part of the meat away at least a half inch deep and toss it to the birds.

Some deer tastes a bit differnt then others depending on where its at and what it eats. I personaly like deer shot in farm fields that eating grain and potatoes over a wild deer eating what ever it finds. I also prefer a eastern deer over one shot out west. Pronghorn is a different taste the deer. but I like that fact. Only proghorn i can say tastes strong are the ones that eat mostly sage. I dont care for the taste of wild turkey. Its eatable but not may favorite so I just dont bother shooting them. As to aging i think you know my opinion of letting bacteria form on venison before packaging it. Im trying to eat up the venison i have left because were starting shooting this years next week. Had a barbeque for all the people that helped build my new home last week. Grilled about 20lbs of back strap along with burgers and bratts and everyone said it was the best venison they had ever ate. It was packaged within an hour of being butchered. What ive found is knowing how to cook it is the real trick. Most tend to overcook venison till its dry and then complain about it being tough and gamey tasting. Ive donated and cooked 100s of lbs for the church at feeds too. Never once have I had a complaint. Matter of fact just the opposite. People ask me how i get it to taste so good.

 Fact is ive cooked ALOT of vension. It is 95 percent of the red meat we eat at my house. Dont get me wrong. I love a GOOD beef steak but ive found that theres a BIG difference in the quality and taste of beef steak depending on the butcher. Its EXPENSIVE TODAY and it doesnt make me happy to get a poor tasting 15 dollar steak. I will only buy beef steak from small local butchers i trust. We have one local butcher/processor that i buy all my steak from. Most of it i get from him in exchange for summer sausage i make or some venison. Ive never heard him complain that i dont age my deer. But if it makes you feel better its your meat do as you please. I think most of the "GAMEY" complaints about deer are people who a queasy about eating bambi and want it to be tasteless so there family doesnt know what there eating. Same ones that want everything to taste like "chicken" Now i wont waste my time on a big boar pig. I like my piss smell to go down the toilet. I also dont bother cutting up a big buck. There made into sausage. Its pretty rare that i shoot a big buck though so thats not a big issue. Big does? Ive had a few that didnt taste bad but were a bit chewy so what i do is when i process a big dry doe i slap the back straps on the grill and if there tender i cut the rest of it up as usual and if there chewy i make burger or cube steaks out of them.

For the typical hunter shooting a deer isnt cheap. If you get a deer the 30-40 lbs of meat cost more then beef. I know personaly during regular season if i go to camp a couple weeks its cost me about 500 bucks. That doesnt include the cost of maintaining camp. If i had to spend that much money of beef steak and needed to soak it in milk to eat it i wouldnt even bother with it. I dont shoot deer to brag or put horns on the wall. Got over that years ago. I shoot them because i like the meat. I just watched a gordon ramsey show on the tv. They were over somewhere it Europe and shot some kind of a deer. They pealed the back straps out and cooked it right in the field. Funny thing was the ramsey said it was the best venison he ever ate. NO milk. NO hanging for a week. FRESH properly handled meat cooked properly. Didnt hear him say it tasted like beef or chicken. Why? Because it isnt.  I could care less. I know one thing thats fact. Ive shot cut up and ate more venison then anyone here. I probably butcher more deer a year then 90 percent of the so called experts here have in there life.  Id bet my new house on that fact. To me its about like having your choice of taking reloading advice from a guy whos only loaded a couple hundred 38s and passes on some internet advice or advice they got from daddy who loaded a 1000 rounds himself. or someone that shoots that many every day and loads and shoots 10s of thousands of round for a 100 different guns. Call this a rant if you want. I could care less. Thats what people that dont know and want to look like they do typically do when anyone dares tell them daddy was wrong or that God forbid there doing something wrong. One thing the internet did was make EVERYONE an expert.
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Offline Buckskin

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Re: THE 4 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO GET RID OF THE GAMEY TASTE IN WILD MEAT
« Reply #8 on: August 19, 2021, 05:40:08 AM »
I warned you all!!!!   ::)
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Offline O-mega

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Re: THE 4 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO GET RID OF THE GAMEY TASTE IN WILD MEAT
« Reply #9 on: August 19, 2021, 07:04:47 AM »
Yes Lloyd, venison has it's own flavor, not what I am referring to.  Certain cuts, like the heart, backstrap, and tenderloin, maybe others, do not need aging, it can be cooked and eaten the same day without any noticeable difference, at least to me.  Venison that is frozen on the same day doesn't taste bad, IMO, but the flavor is stronger than when you age it.  But even the venison that gets frozen the same day, with one piece soaked in milk and the other not taste different, again, not bad, just different.  Also, if you spice or marinate the venison certain ways you won't tell the difference because the spices will mask the difference.  I guess it really boils down to having different taste buds, and sense of smell; some are more sensitive to certain smells and flavors which will determine if you will enjoy the meal or not.  IMO, food needs to look, smell and taste good, me and the wife argue about that all the time.  She makes an enchilada casserole which have the same exact ingredients than the rolled ones, but I can't stand the casserole for some reason.  It seems when you mix everything you lose the subtle taste difference of the ingredients, but she insists that it tastes the same.
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Offline Buckskin

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Re: THE 4 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO GET RID OF THE GAMEY TASTE IN WILD MEAT
« Reply #10 on: August 19, 2021, 08:04:08 AM »
For those interest and possibly to prevent a rehash of this topic...

https://www.go2gbo.com/threads/deer-hang-vs-butcher-after-rigor-mortis.406472/


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Online Mule 11

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Re: THE 4 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO GET RID OF THE GAMEY TASTE IN WILD MEAT
« Reply #11 on: August 19, 2021, 11:16:00 AM »
Yes Lloyd, venison has it's own flavor, not what I am referring to.  Certain cuts, like the heart, backstrap, and tenderloin, maybe others, do not need aging, it can be cooked and eaten the same day without any noticeable difference, at least to me.  Venison that is frozen on the same day doesn't taste bad, IMO, but the flavor is stronger than when you age it.  But even the venison that gets frozen the same day, with one piece soaked in milk and the other not taste different, again, not bad, just different.  Also, if you spice or marinate the venison certain ways you won't tell the difference because the spices will mask the difference.  I guess it really boils down to having different taste buds, and sense of smell; some are more sensitive to certain smells and flavors which will determine if you will enjoy the meal or not.  IMO, food needs to look, smell and taste good, me and the wife argue about that all the time.  She makes an enchilada casserole which have the same exact ingredients than the rolled ones, but I can't stand the casserole for some reason.  It seems when you mix everything you lose the subtle taste difference of the ingredients, but she insists that it tastes the same.
I believe that the way the ingredients are added also make a (huge) difference... Two cooks can use the exact same ingredients and have totally different results.
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Offline Ranger99

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Re: THE 4 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO GET RID OF THE GAMEY TASTE IN WILD MEAT
« Reply #12 on: August 19, 2021, 12:17:33 PM »
JMHO-
I think it makes a huge difference in
the area of the country that you happened
to be standing in as to how you care for
your game and fish.
I can say for sure that where I hunt
and fish that the big difference in
quality of the bite is how fast you
can get your fish and meat on ice.
I can see how that in northern climates
that things aren't near as urgent to
get cooled off quickly as it is here.
I strive to get any fowl or game or
fish on ice ASAP here. Not necessarily
frozen, but cooled down and any
heat gone. Otherwise it's not fit
for anything other than fishing chum
or varmint trapping bait
18 MINUTES.  . . . . . .

Online Mule 11

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Re: THE 4 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO GET RID OF THE GAMEY TASTE IN WILD MEAT
« Reply #13 on: August 19, 2021, 02:12:05 PM »
JMHO-
I think it makes a huge difference in
the area of the country that you happened
to be standing in as to how you care for
your game and fish.
I can say for sure that where I hunt
and fish that the big difference in
quality of the bite is how fast you
can get your fish and meat on ice.
I can see how that in northern climates
that things aren't near as urgent to
get cooled off quickly as it is here.
I strive to get any fowl or game or
fish on ice ASAP here. Not necessarily
frozen, but cooled down and any
heat gone. Otherwise it's not fit
for anything other than fishing chum
or varmint trapping bait
I agree with your opinion...

Online Mule 11

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Re: THE 4 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO GET RID OF THE GAMEY TASTE IN WILD MEAT
« Reply #14 on: August 19, 2021, 02:15:58 PM »
JMHO-
I think it makes a huge difference in
the area of the country that you happened
to be standing in as to how you care for
your game and fish.
I can say for sure that where I hunt
and fish that the big difference in
quality of the bite is how fast you
can get your fish and meat on ice.
I can see how that in northern climates
that things aren't near as urgent to
get cooled off quickly as it is here.
I strive to get any fowl or game or
fish on ice ASAP here. Not necessarily
frozen, but cooled down and any
heat gone. Otherwise it's not fit
for anything other than fishing chum
or varmint trapping bait
When I was lucky enough to live on rented farmland. I would go into the field with a backpack and a bag of ice. Field strip immediately whatever I collected and put on ice until I had a meal. Ahhh, the good old days...

Offline Ranger99

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Re: THE 4 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO GET RID OF THE GAMEY TASTE IN WILD MEAT
« Reply #15 on: August 19, 2021, 05:08:31 PM »
In the good old days when one could cross
over and dove hunt the huge fields south
of the Rio without fear of the cartels
( cartel? What's that?) The bird boys
would hang all your birds on the fence
to cool off. You didn't dare put any in
a hot game pocket unless you wanted
a stinky puke smelling mess soaking
into the back of your shirt
18 MINUTES.  . . . . . .