RIP Lunch and Dinner!
Joe then removes most of the fat from the outside of the carcass. We will render the fat to make lard (for delicious pie crusts!). He then butchers and quarters the pig. This involves sawing the pig is half by cutting right down the middle of the backbone with a bone saw. We had an interesting time figuring how to get the pig from the hook to the cutting table without dropping it on the floor. I had to bear hug the carcass at one point...great fun let me tell you. This whole process takes about 3 hours, so he puts the meat on ice until the morning.
I won't get into details but they died a quickly and painlessly.
Hanging weight was about 160 to 175 lbs each. That's a lot of pork!
Most people send their pigs to the local butcher shop. Joe butchered his pig in the barn.
Many people choose to scald and burn the hair off their hog and scrape the skin clean. Joe chose to skin his pig. The process took some time, but the skin came off in one piece. Once the pig is hung up by it's back legs (between the bone and tendon) it is skinned. Once the skin has been removed, he removes the head, and splits the carcass by cutting a clean line down the center of the belly, all the way to the breast bone. Be careful not to cut the stomach or intestines open. After splitting the carcass he removes the ainus, bowls, intestines, stomach, lungs, heart, liver, etc.. once you have the ainus removed everything else can be cut away fairly easily.
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