I've been looking at a unit like the one in your right photo KJ. Think it's about $200.
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I've been looking at a unit like the one in your right photo KJ. Think it's about $200.
The current venison in the fridge is a 'loose' fit (lots of air space around it) with nothing touching the sides. The thermostat/temperature control is a 1 - 7 scale (L to R) with a thermometer icon on the right hand side. I've turned it from 1 to 5 and I'll check it in a couple of hours. You may be correct about setting it to freeze.
Attachment 44631
Thanks KJ.
@kiwijames
Thanks.
Plan "A" failed and dumped
Plan "B" beginning to brew.
Cheers
Pete
Got a double door display cabinet. Works well but the meat dries out on the outside. Is that a humidity problem?
Yes. The refrigeration cycle will always do that. Even the commercial units have this problem. It is fine for Coke cans and packaged product as they are sealed. Anything exposed to the ambient condition will dry out. Keep your venison in the original packaging as long as you can or, if ageing try a vacuum packer or plastic bag. Vacuum packing is my preference. This is the same reason you get freezer burn and lumps of ice in your sealed frozen products. Mini climates in the bag with wet and dry bulb temperatures approaching equal, force the water out of the product and is then re-frozen during the run cycle. It can't go back.
The fresh fruit and meat industries have very large cooling coils to not only rapidly chill but also reduce water loss from their product. Lighter carcass weight = less money for your product so is money well spent. Every kilo of defrost water is a kilo of cash lost.
Even the wine guys suffer with what they call "Angels portion". The porous oak casks the wine matures in will leach out some water content and can get up to 5% lost through the the cask in refrigerated storage. This also bumps up the ABV% [emoji3]
A lot of our meat gets boned out in the bush. I'll try wrapping some in glad wrap for ageing.
Its worth noteing a bit of drying can be benificial for handeling the carcass without it picking up all sorts of crap and all those outer guard/sheath muscles should be trimmed off your steak for sausages where they will rehydrate anyway.
Too much humidity can be very very bad with rot or even mould setting in.
My little chiller struggles in summer temps usually only pulling down to 7-9 degc. It was recently regassed and now ices up the cooler bit quite bad espesially if you put wet deer in there.
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Always use pillow cases till its cold. Thanks for the advise.