Thanks
I personally have assumed high meat was more than just letting something age, that it involed some controls of exposure to oxygen and such.
do you keep everything in the plastic packaging ( you are doing mostly delivery right?) or do you transport to jars and things? are you leaving meat exposed in the fridge? or outside the fridge? Which organs would you then lats longer, more carbs like liver? also would this rule also apply to fats like suet?
The only real control is making sure you air it out every once in a while. It's one of the simplest things you can make.
I buy my meat from a market ~45 minutes away. They get delivery of a single grassfed steer once every other week and I pick up my chuck primal cut (the full shoulder blade) a day after delivery.
I pick up it up in a large heavy gauge plastic bag they give it to me in. I then transfer it to a large (the largest container they had at the store) plastic Tupperware container. I'd love to use something less reactive, like glass, but it's a ton of meat and I don't have anything else that big.
I'm opening the container each morning before work and evening when I get home to cut my meal of so just flip it then to make sure it airs out good.
I've left the meat out on the counter free to the air before and it worked nicely but gets too smelly for eating in my office. I've also left it open to the air in the fridge but since I share a fridge with my wife, and she eats other things, it can pick up smells and flavors I'm not fond of this way.
When I purposely make high meat it's always in a simple glass mason jar. Just make sure the throat of the jar is big enough to get your hand in or you might need to toss the jar rather than wash it when done. I guess you could reuse it but since I always had multiple jars going at once I never did.
Organs change pretty quickly no matter what organ they are. Maybe it's the higher nutrient content? Liver will last you about a week before you start to notice some changes.
I don't age fat nor do I think it's a good thing. Every time I eat fat that's been sitting for more than a week it's got a deterrent note to the taste. This is enough to keep me from eating it. I keep my fat in the freezer and take it out as need be. I prefer my suet semi-frozen anyways so this works well for me.