>> I’ve actually come to like my meat more on the ripe side
Please correct me if my memory is becoming as bad as my social skills, but your description of your normal home food routine, layed out a very careful compliance with the hygiene requirements of the fresh-meat cold chain.
What the heck is “the hygiene requirements of the fresh-meat cold chain”? Never heard of it. I do thaw, mix, repackage, and then refreeze my food when I receive a shipment. This is because I get a month or more of food at a time and if left in the fridge it would be mostly goo after a couple of weeks. I often take out 5 days worth of food and let it thaw in the fridge. Each day I take a thawed package and leave it out to warm up for most of the day. By the 4th and 5th days, the packages in the fridge are dark and have an off smell. After they’ve sat out in the warm weather (especially in summer) for 6-8 hours they are bubbly and sour tasting.
I would also mention that typical paleolithic human hunter-gatherer bands were large enough to eat quite a bit of even a large animal, within hours.
we know that many paleo bands preferred and treasured older, larger animals with plenty of fat deposits and meat.... but I think that predators typically end up eating a large percentage of juvenile (=skinny) and sickly (=skinny) herbivores.
And we know this how? I don’t know of anyone who was around 100,000 to ½ a million years ago and I know of no literature describing day-to-day paleo life that has survived from that period either. The modern literature on the subject is just speculation, and based on the poor track record of the “experts”, I’m not willing to accept their wishful thinking as fact, and therefore I don’t claim to know anything about the daily life of our paleo ancestors at all.
The North American Great Plains Indians apparently had evolved a real assembly-line process of quickly processing fresh meat into packaged pemmican.
Apropos of pemmican making.... does rendering bovine fat occur at a low enough (isn't 104 F the "magic number?) temperature to qualify as a "raw" food?
I know of no “magic number”, whatever that is, but I do know that you can’t render fat at 104 F. 104 F won’t even melt the more saturated fatty acids. You must render fat at a temperature above the point of boiling water. Of course you can melt fat at any temperature you wish, but melting is not rendering.
Making pemmican is a lot of work and requires time and technology. I find it simpler to just eat my food raw and spend the time I save working on clocks, playing the piano, watching TV, or a host of other more interesting activities. Pemmican is a great emergency food, but I only eat it when raw foods are not convenient or available.
Lex