"Buffalo Hunt" - George Catlin |
The Parfleche Meat Holder
Soaking The Rawhide |
Going back to our example of buffalo, the hide of it was used to make different rawhide containers called “perleche.” The flesh side would have been scraped clean of meat and fat and the hair would oftentimes be removed by being pounded with a stone. The rawhide would then be shaped and made into different “folders” and containers. Understandably, our minds many times will go to these images of pigment decorated rawhide of different American tribal design. A number, however, were decorated by only incised designs and many were undecorated all together. As this particular “folder” style parfleche was going to be holding pemmican, of which the tallow would inevitably seep into the rawhide, helping to seal it all around, not to mention eventually become a bit of a greasy mess, it made the most logical sense to me to not decorate this one.
Rawhide Shaped and Holes Drilled |
Folder Laced and Drying |
As I didn’t have ready access to buffalo meat, I wanted to get a good sized piece of beef with as little fat content as possible. I selected a 5-6 pound piece of “eye of round.” While I wanted to build a rack
for in my house (or even daringly my classroom) it was determined that “jerking” the meat at a low temperature in my smoker would probably be the best way to go in December in Montana. I thinly sliced the meat, sprinkled some salt and pepper on it for some slight flavor and into the smoker it went until it was mostly dry. I then removed the meat onto cookie cooling racks in our kitchen until the meat was completely dry. I then broke the meat down into small pieces until I was ready to continuing processing it. It being winter, and as I don’t currently have a mortar and pestle, I used a food processor to continue breaking down the meat. I was able to get what appeared “mostly” powdered down. I now had roughly 4 ½ cups of dried powdered beef.
Mixing the Tallow and Dried Meat |
While I look forward to doing the whole process from scratch at some point, for the sake of time, as
well as this being my first time making pemmican, I purchased beef tallow on Amazon.com. I figured as I had 4 ½ cups of powdered meat I’d likely need roughly the same amount of melted tallow. Boy was I wrong! Shortly into the pour from the saucepan on the stove into the large glass bowl I had the powdered meat in I realized I wasn’t going to need nearly as much tallow. I quickly poured from the bowl into the saucepan what I figured was the excess tallow before it was all absorbed into the meat. I then thoroughly mixed things until it was sticky enough to hold its form. The excess tallow I allowed to cool down some and then back into it container it went. The pemmican was now done. I put it into the folder. It was still warm. A while later you could see where the tallow was working its way into the rawhide.
Putting the Pemmican in the Folder |
I kept set some pemmican aside that was roughly the size of a golf ball that wasn’t put into the folder. In a similar fashion to what Rodney Douglas and Sean McQueen had done on their 2017 Fall Hunt, I took that ball of pemmican and water and made it into a soup in my tin cup for part of my dinner. I added a little salt to the pemmican soup. The flavor, to me at least, wasn’t off putting. It was slightly reminiscent of watery juices from a steak. Not terrible at all really. It’s not my favorite, however, I think on a cold night night in the snow in the winter if I was not able to make meat, I’d be glad to have this. In fact, I look forward to using this pemmican during our upcoming winter camp.
Final Thoughts
I think pounding the meat with a stone or using a mortal and pestel would give you better results in as far as processing the meat. The food processor appeared to do a good job, however, there was a decent amount, I’d say between ¼ and ⅓ of the meat, that was still like little pieces of twig.
I want to do this again where I dry the meat on a rack outside. It would be interesting to see the difference in how the tallow absorbs into the powdered meat and how this affects the meat.
I’d like to do this with venison as well as buffalo and use some bone marrow too.
Meat Folder full of Pemmican |