A little about me.
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This past year I took the plunge and raised my first hogs. Two berk/duroc crosses were bought in March and at the end of December (that’s the soonest my help would have time to do them) we butchered them. The smallest had a hanging weight of 395. We did not weigh the larger of the two, but he was easily over 400 hanging.
I have hunted for years and never liked the idea of someone else processing my deer, so I have done a lot of deer. Usually, I do a lot of jerky, an italian sausage, and summer sausage. That’s what we will eat, so I don’t mess with anything else…other than the tenderloins…those are always eaten panfried in butter as a sort of toast to the year and hoping for a great season next year.
I was fairly confident I could process a hog but to be on the safe side I asked an old friend who had been a hog farmer on a large operation for years to give me a hand and lend his expertise. In exchange for his and his son’s assistance, I offered them the second hog. Everything went smooth and I have been working of the sausage, bacon and hams every since.
I recently discovered Waltons Inc. and man am I glad I did…wish I would have years ago. I look forward to learning more in the future. -
cdavis Masterbuilt Canning Kamado Joes Regular Contributors Power User Sous Vide Oklahoma Team Camoreplied to chrispbrown27 on last edited by
chrispbrown27 great story and welcome aboard. You’ll love this community. Lots and lots of knowledge here. Everyone is willing to help. I have learned so much here. Let me be the first to invite you to join team blue.
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The basics are the same. All animals of four legs have he same cuts in the same location basically, but with a hog I wanted to be more careful. With a deer, if I mess up a cut…oh well, it goes into sausage grindings typically anyway. With my hogs, I wanted the hams cut a certain way, the chops cut a certain way, and, of course, you do not want to mess up any bacon! I was much more careful about where I put the knife, let’s say. The skinning (we didn’t mess with scalding) was slightly different. It took a lot more knife work to separate the skin from the fat, as I wanted all of the fat I could on the meat so that I could choose how much fat was left on the cuts and because I both rendered lard and used it for deer sausage. The easiest way I found was to cut around the feet and then use a gut hook to run slits down the legs and down the body. Once I had that done, I went back up to the top and held the knife as tight to the skin as I could and just let the knife ride down the skin as I pulled. With a razor-sharp knife, this is pretty simple.
Overall, I was pretty impressed with how easy it was. The biggest obstacle was the size. I had built a meat pole with two stations and a hand winch for each station. Hand winches were fine for a 150 lb deer…they were not enough for a 400 lb hog. I will be upgrading to electric winches for the next time, even though I don’t have plans to ever get to 400 lbs again. I have a sub-compact Kubota tractor that I had planned on using to move the carcass from the kill area to the meat pole and it was very nearly outclasses by the 400 lb hogs. The bucket could lift them but rolling 400 lbs of dead weight into a bucket is not easy. So, instead I ended up tying them by the rear legs to the bucket and lifting them like that, which resulted in the heads not clearing the ground. It wasn’t that big of a deal, just not how I had imagined it going. The first hog I gutted laying on the ground…this is NOT the way to do it. Gutting a deer, you have a pretty clear path inside the chest even when laying on its side. With a hog, there is a LOT of fat that covers your view while working in there. When you get them up and then gut, you still have the fat to contend with but most of the things you don’t want to cut into fall down into the chest cavity and give you a better view. If I had it to do over again (which I will next winter), I would take the head off before gutting and then the guts will simply fall out of the neck when you cut it loose.
Anyone that has processed a deer can do a hog as long as they take into account the scale difference. -
YooperDog Team Orange Masterbuilt Big Green Egg Dry Cured Sausage Sous Vide Canning Power Userreplied to chrispbrown27 on last edited by
chrispbrown27 welcome aboard! Great story and I bet you learned a lot. Go Team Orange
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kyle Regular Contributors Veteran Canning Team Blue Power User Sous Vide Wisconsin Gardeningreplied to chrispbrown27 on last edited by
chrispbrown27 it’s nice to butcher your own animals, then you have complete control of the quality. Good story. Welcome to the community
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chrispbrown27 Welcome, hope we can help with whatever you need but you sound pretty well setup and well informed!
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bocephus Team Orange Power User Canning Masterbuilt Regular Contributors Veteran New Mexico Sous Vide Gardening
Great information, I have a friend who raises beef and hogs for personal use for family and friends, he invited me to help if I ever get back to MN. I was up there one weekend a few years ago for a wedding and went out and helped cut up some steers. I wish I had the set up that he has for butchering. This year he added a cold room for hanging, he doesn’t need a cooling system because they butcher in late Nov. and early Dec. Someday I hope to be able to be a part of this operation.
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calldoctoday Team Blue Power User Regular Contributors Alabamareplied to chrispbrown27 on last edited by
chrispbrown27 Welcome aboard & welcome to the neighborhood.