Butchering A Pig: Video from our harvest

Y'all, we've been busy over here learning proper ways for butchering a pig.My head must be thick as a rock. Almost three months later, I realized that I have yet to post some super-awesome footage that I shot when the Farmstead Meatsmith came to visit our farm and taught us how to butcher pigs.Butchering a Pig: Weighing the side of pork | The Elliott HomesteadDang it. All this time I've been holding out on you! Not because I don't love you. But because I'm a brain-fart.Unfortunately, in that three months of brain-fart time, it's been easy for me to forget the exact layout of these clips and how they all pieced together. And naturally, in the bustle of the holidays, I didn't have the time to edit them into a masterpiece anyway. And thus, you'll be getting a 30+ minute video that's strewn together clips - if you listen, you can even hear my camera trying to focus in the darkness of the shop where we butchered the pigs.You're welcome for this incredible cinematic feature on butchering a pig.http://youtu.be/tBJ7ELFd84URegardless, it's still pretty fun! Watching back through the videos brought me all kinds of fun, fuzzy homesteader joy. It was the art of learning a new skill. The fun of trying to think about a common and familiar product in an entirely new way. The adventure of a task!Butchering a Pig: Roughly 115 pounds per side | The Elliott HomesteadI love tasks. And I find a serious, sick pleasure in accomplishing them. Filling the freezer with these two 'ol pigs was no exception. I can't wait to do it again in the Spring. In fact, I think we'll even add another one on for good measure. There are a few things I know for sure in life.... and one of them is that girlfriend always needs more pigs.And more bacon. Let's just be honest here.But we shan't be distracted with that delicious bacon. Back to the task at hand.Butchering a Pig: Separating into the four main parts | The Elliott Homestead

Butchering A Pig

After the pigs were slaughtered and eviscerated, they were taken to the local flower shop where I used to work. The owner lovingly agreed to let me put the pig carcasses in her giant floral cooler, which reminds me, I need to take her some pork chops...The coolness of the cooler helped the meat to stiffen up a bit which made the cutting the next day much easier. Had we butchered in November or December, which we're planning to do next year, we could have just hung the pigs in our cool shop instead and saved ourselves the trip.Note to self: butcher later in the year when it's cool. Not only does this help with storage but it also helps with flies and yellow jackets!Butchering a Pig: Instructions on proscuitto making | The Elliott HomesteadOnce we got the pigs set up on tables in the shop the next morning, we all stood back (there was about 6 of us at the class) to watch Brandon and learn his ways. Man. What a talent that guy has.Butchering a Pig: Wrapping up the meat bound for the freezer | The Elliott HomesteadThe finesse and care he took for the pig butchering was incredible. His knives gently slipped through the muscle and fat like butter. Where I just saw giant muscle groups, Brandon saw grooves and crevasses and natural curvature for cuts. His entire style was devoted to honoring the pig for being that particular pig - each chop was hand cut to the actual size of the bone spaces. The loin was gently removed by a pair of well-trained hands. The back fat was also separated by hand, in one giant, delicious, white pieces of lard.Butchering a Pig: Holly helping with butchering | The Elliott HomesteadNothing was standardized. Everything was completely customized based on our beautiful pigs. It was beautiful and honoring to watch.Literally, not one scrap went to waste. Not. A. Single. Scrap.Butchering a Pig: Perfect cut | The Elliott HomesteadThe little bits and pieces that were trimmed off went into our pork rillette. Anything with blood on it from the killing process went to Toby (our dog who is on a natural foods based diet). Even the head was utilized in the form of headcheese (the scraps of which went to the laying hens).It was an entirely, full-circle approach to butchering a pig. And it was fantastic.Thanks to some of Brandon's online resources (the 'How To Kill A Pig Nicely' DVD and 'The Butcher's Salt' book in particular) we will be able to harvest our own pigs next year. And though I'm sure we'll fumble through in a much less elegant way than Brandon did, it'll still be worth it to invest the time into learning. Like so many of our farm tasks, it's a skill that must be learn by time invested.Butchering a Pig: Trotter bound for stock | The Elliott HomesteadDare I say (and I may eat my words and completely deny that I ever said such a thing), I think we'll always have pigs on the farm. In fact, I'm trying to convince Stu that we need to raise our own heritage pigs. They are such an incredible resource - besides the intestines, not a scrap was wasted.Butchering a Pig: Me and my proscuitto | The Elliott HomesteadThe backfat has been rendered down to lard and utilized for cooking in a thousand ways. The heart was sauteed in butter, fresh from the day of the butchering, for supper - so good! The kidneys, lungs, and liver went to the dog. A few extra scraps and bits to the chickens.And while they were alive, the pigs ate every single scrap of food from our kitchen. This included leftovers, fruit peelings, soured milk, garden scraps, rotten vegetables, and more. They were my garbage disposal. And they turned it into bacon.On top of that, even with being fed super-high-quality, organic, local, non-GMO feed, grain, the price per pound equated out to less than $2/lb.INSANE.Money can't buy pork that delicious. That has been cared for, loved on, killed humanely, and harvested with care.Butchering a pig | The Elliott HomesteadThis is why life on the farm has value. This is what makes life on the farm so dang good.And Amen.Butchering a pig | The Elliott Homestead

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