Artemis

Butchery with Anna Borgman


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Anna Borgman went to culinary school before she became a hunter. She studied the relationship between how an animal was raised to how it tasted on the plate. The same is true for game -- a sense of place imparts itself onto every animal harvested. This episode, we talk about the art of butchery, and delve into some practical tips -- like which knives you need and how to handle silverskin.

2:30 - May 29 "So You Think You Wanna Fish?" webinar with Artemis

8:00 - Shooting stars! Paint brushes! Lupine! Oh, my! That lovely point when you know your local wildflowers by name... it bolsters your sense of place

10:00 - iNaturalist citizen science app; plus Seek app, which uses your phone to identify plants

10:30 - Anna of Forage Fed teaches butchery and does game processing, and she's also into how food systems work

13:00 - Portland Meat Collective with Camas Davis - whole animal butchery for chefs

15:00 - Cricket protein farming... yup.

16:30 - Entomophogy = bugs for food

17:50 - Butchery versus meat-cutting

20:00 - Why does meat look different on older vs. younger animals, or how does meat quality change depending on how an animal has been raised?

20:30 – Fred Provenza’s work on how animals meet their own nutritional needs instinctually

25:00 - How animals are fed affects so much else... land use, public land health, etc.

28:00 - There's no single right way to butcher an animal. The two golden rules, however, would be 'clean' and 'cold' -- below 45 degrees is ideal

30:00 - Gloves can help you handle that meat without your hands going numb.

31:00 - You don't need an expensive knife. You just need a sharp knife. Anna uses the Victorinox ones... totally affordable.

32:00 - Knife arsenal: you need a boning knife (maybe two, depending on stiffness preference), a paring knife, and a butcher knife. A grinder is also pretty handy

34:00 - Being a woman at 'sausage school' and laughing like a teenager at all the punny jokes

35:00 - Cleaning silver skin, which is the connective tissue that lines muscles (it also dulls your knives and clogs your grinder)

40:30 - Subbing whitefish in a crabcake recipe

42:00 - Meat color/toughness has to do with how muscles are used for movement (and something called myoglobin)

49:00 - Good books to start out with: Adam Danforth's books on beef and other animals; MeatEater's guide to field processing 

53:00 - You can't mess it up. Really! Just get in there and cut up the animal. You get better every time.

56:30 - In the field, try to keep your knife hand clean. One hand for pulling hide and swatting hair, one for clean meat-handling.

57:30 - a bone dust scraper

59:00 - dry-aging & flavor

1:06:00 - Bear fecal plugs, ya'll

1:07:00 - Find Anna at forage-fed.com, or @annaborgman on Insta

...more
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