Re: Skin on or off?
Well, each to his own I suppose -- and everyone has his/her own way to doing things. However, being an Animal Science major I took some meats courses at Texas A&M and recall a study that was conducted there years ago (albeit with deer). They found that the meat was in no danger of spoiling, and flavor was not affected, during the first 24 hours of a kill no matter what temperature the carcass was kept at (within reason of course). The meat is virtually sterile inside, except where the bullet drags bacteria inside, and as the carcass cools, it is Ok for 24 hrs or so. So, basically whether the carcass cools down in 2 hours or 24 hours, it should matter. I wouldn't think it would matter if the skin is left on an elk as long as the carcass is cooled down in about a day. If the outside temperature is cool enough and the animal is gutted, then it will still cool with the skin on. The skin will keep the meat clean and moist. We routinely leave the skin on deer which hang for a day, sometimes when the temperature is 80F during the day and gets no lower than 60s at night. Have done it for years. True, it is easier to skin when fresh but is not necessary as long as provision are made to cool down the carcass. Domestic livestock in the US all have a layer of fat that prevents the crusting while it is aging in the cooler.