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Processing wild game? App offers tips to keep meat tasty

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(MCT) — MINNEAPOLIS — Kerry Swendsen believes bad-tasting venison is more the fault of the deer hunter than the deer.

A lifelong hunter who has been cutting and processing meat since he was a kid, Swendsen is fastidious about his wild game.

Venison, in particular.

“Clean, clean, clean,’’ he says, repeating the mantra that guides his method of field dressing and meat processing.

Swendsen’s introduction to meat handling began decades ago when he helped his dad dress, skin and butcher beef cattle. The experience was invaluable, he says, in developing the way he handles deer and venison.

“I’ve been meat cutting all my life,’’ he said. “But not all meat cutters know how to field dress a deer. They’re two different processes.’’

Recently, Swendsen and a partner, Wendell Ball, launched a smartphone app that instructs hunters with words and text, as well as video, the proper way to field dress a deer.

The app is available for iPhones and Android devices (download from an app store or go to www.deerdummy.com).

Working under their DeerDummy.com business name (Swendsen and Ball also sell cutting boards, knives, seasoning and other products), the pair have conducted seminars throughout the greater metro showing hunters how to handle deer come Saturday morning, when the state’s 2012 whitetail season opens.

“You really need to get a deer spick and-span when you field dress it and prepare it for butchering,’’ Swendsen said. “It’s pathetic, really, the way many hunters treat their deer. And it affects the taste of venison. Leaves and dirt and blood — they all can permeate the meat and make it taste bad.’’

Hunters routinely make five mistakes when they field dress deer, Swendsen says. Avoid them, he says, to ensure having great-tasting venison in the freezer for the long winter ahead. Here they are:

Mistake No. 1:

Field dressing too quickly in cooler climates

“In most deer hunting situations in Minnesota, it’s cool enough so you can take some time after you kill a deer before field dressing it,’’ Swendsen said.

Instead of dressing a deer where it falls, he advises, “leave it fully enclosed as long as you can.’’

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