Not really.
I'm a butcher. I have a 12" steak knife and a 5" boning knife, mesh glove and scabbard in my cupboard at the moment. They are my work knives.
I know how to break down animal carcasses for retail sale (for the most part). It also makes it a lot easier for grinding into burger for disposing of the evidence.
If Robert Pickton had known how to split apart a human being, grind them up and feed that to his pigs, he wouldn't have been caught for a helluva lot longer.
Night all![]()
Proper nomenclature for cube-steak is "minute steak" or "tenderized steak," though. For resale purposes, anyways. Otherwise, massive CFIA fines. Unless you are giving it back to the customer who brought in the deer. In that case, you can call it whatever you want.
Grinds aren't hard to make, just gotta make sure your fat content is within range. Again, mostly for resale purposes, but deer meat is quite lean, so I would toss in some 80-20 pork trim as well, just to add a bit of flavour.
Beyond that, same general concept, just a different animal.