Ghost
Well-known member
Do you tend to eat your rabbit meat before rigor mortis or to you let the meat go through rigor mortis then relax in the refrigerator? I am thinking that freezing before rigor mortis sets in would be pre-rigor mortis. I have frozen all of my rabbits before rigor mortis. I do not have experience, but I assume, if one of these rabbits had been thawed out and been allowed to sit-out, the meat would develop rigor mortis, (if you have knowledge tell me).
I tend to over romanticize the idea of snuffing out a creature in the morning then slip the still limp carcass into the stewpot for a late-afternoon meal. This does seem to emulate the way most predators consume their prey just after killing it.
One factor that my have been in my choosing to cook of freeze my rabbits prior to rigor mortis is that all the rabbits that I cooked involved putting the whole dresses carcass in a pot and simmering on low. My cooking skills are limited to making soups or stews. I love the delicious tasting soups with the tender meat.
According from I read on forums in 2007, eating meat that was cooked during rigor mortis seems rather "bouncy". I don't know if cooking in water reduced this bounciness. A second factor that I shared a rabbitry with my neighbor, and I would get get a few rabbits each time our doe kindled. During my rabbitry experience I would only work one rabbit at a time, so I would finish well before the rabbit started to stiffening up.
What is your experience do you tend to cook pre or post rigor mortis?
I tend to over romanticize the idea of snuffing out a creature in the morning then slip the still limp carcass into the stewpot for a late-afternoon meal. This does seem to emulate the way most predators consume their prey just after killing it.
One factor that my have been in my choosing to cook of freeze my rabbits prior to rigor mortis is that all the rabbits that I cooked involved putting the whole dresses carcass in a pot and simmering on low. My cooking skills are limited to making soups or stews. I love the delicious tasting soups with the tender meat.
According from I read on forums in 2007, eating meat that was cooked during rigor mortis seems rather "bouncy". I don't know if cooking in water reduced this bounciness. A second factor that I shared a rabbitry with my neighbor, and I would get get a few rabbits each time our doe kindled. During my rabbitry experience I would only work one rabbit at a time, so I would finish well before the rabbit started to stiffening up.
What is your experience do you tend to cook pre or post rigor mortis?