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the Pemmican Brief
#1
[size="4"]Pemmican Brief[/size]
[size="4"]the ultimate survival food[/size]
[size="4"]Calum[/size]
[size="3"]From the appearance of Mankind on Earth till just very recently, we lived as an integral part of nature, eating what grew or was hunted. Tribes, clans, peoples, moving through their territory, harvesting berries here, nuts there and catching lots of fish at the right time.[/size]
[size="3"]Everything has a season, and when the time came to harvest animals, we would be at the right place, to take the ones less necessary, the ones we needed, and prepare a store of food for the winter and more. We found that red meat can be preserved, raw and vital, as Pemmican.[/size]
[size="3"]Dehydrated, lean flesh, mixed with rendered fat (not cooked) equally, pressed into compact shapes and kept cool and dry lasts for years! Sealed in clay or wrapped in hide, these Paleolithic Protein Bars were our primary food source and provided for our complete nutrition.[/size]
[size="3"]Simple, even stone age, tools are all that is required to fry fat till it runs liquid: a large, platter like stone over a huge fire, runnels to send the liquid fat, rich in vitamins and minerals, to the hide bags it would cool in before being mixed with the dried meat.[/size]
[size="3"]Racks of woven sticks, over low fires in the sun, would dehydrate the meat, carefully stripped from the bone, sliced, shredded and pounded. When the meat was fully dry, the fat would be reheated in the bags and then combined evenly, mixed thoroughly, and pressed into molds.[/size]
[size="3"]Today we render fat from grass fed cattle, buffalo, deer and elk, in stockpots on the stove, never cooking it- just liquifying, filtering, and separating it from the yummy cracklings (like pork rinds) and the meat slice and grind with steel tools and dry in a modern dehydrator.[/size]
[size="3"]We form it in little cakes to go on salads, bars to slice and serve with sprouted seed flatbreads, and sheets for pizza, lasagna and pie. We eat our Pemmican bars after we hit the gym, when we go hiking or to the beach, we give it to our kids for lunch at school: it's life.[/size]
[size="3"]Pemmican is the original superfood, all the vitamins, minerals, enzymes and amino acids from some of the healthiest animals on earth, harvested responsibly, prepared conscientiously, preserved perfectly, and perfectly digestible by every healthy human being and our pets.[/size]
[size="3"]Dogs and cats fed pemmican their whole life may well live 50% longer.[/size]
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#2
I appreciate your article, thanks.

I just ordered some beef fat from my beef supplier so that I can make my first home made Tallow.   I just learned that tallow is rendered beef fat and lard is pork fat, didn't know the difference!

Come to find out it's very easy to produce and a crockpot works great on just the warm mode to melt the fat, filter and viole...    it has an incredibly long shelf life.

This year we plan to dehydrate quite a bit of produce as well as meat (jerky too).





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#3
I've read of this stuff. neat
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#4
Pemmican - The Ultimate Survival Food
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_vLuMobHCI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQZj1-lSilw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MElMJsIP1Y0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xik1arbTPRk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hgITppoWAI8
http://www.traditionaltx.us/images/PEMMICAN.pdf
http://www.manuellisaparty.com/articles/...mmican.pdf
https://meatscience.org/docs/default-sou...mmican.pdf
https://survivalsherpa.wordpress.com/201...ilderness/
https://www.skilledsurvival.com/how-to-make-pemmican/



-

The Pemmican Manual
Pemmican is a concentrated nutritionally complete food invented by the North American Plains
Indians. It was originally made during the summer months from dried lean Buffalo meat and
rendered fat as a way to preserve and store the meat for use when traveling and as a primary food
source during the lean winter months.
When pemmican was discovered by our early Frontiersmen (explorers, hunters, trappers, and the
like) it became a highly sought after commodity. The Hudson Bay Company purchased tons of
pemmican from the native tribes each year to satisfy the demand. The basic unit of trade was an
animal hide filled with pemmican, sealed with pure rendered fat on the seams, and weighed
about 90 pounds. As long as it was kept away from moisture, heat, and direct sunlight, it would
last for many years with no refrigeration or other method of preservation.
There appeared to be two types of pemmican. One was a mixture of 50% shredded dehydrated
lean meat and 50% rendered fat by weight. The other mixture was similar but contained 50%
rendered fat, 45% shredded dehydrated meat and 5% dried and ground berries by weight. The
berries were typically Saskatoon berries which grew in abundance in the Great Plains area, and
are similar to blueberries.
There is much controversy as to whether the natives included the dried berries in the pemmican
they made for themselves or whether they added it only to the pemmican they sold to the Hudson
Bay Company “because the White Man preferred it that way”. I’m of a mind that the natives
consumed it both ways. The Journals from the Lewis & Clark expedition clearly state that the
Indian tribes they encountered consumed some berries, fruits, and tubers as part of their diet. It
seems reasonable that the inclusion of some dried berries would not be out of character for the
batches of pemmican made in late summer when ripe berries were available. Berries do not
appear to be a nutritional requirement and they increase the chance of spoilage, so the pemmican
formula in this document is for meat and fat only, and does not include them.
Please bear in mind that pemmican is NOT a raw food, as the fat needs to be heated above 200
deg F. in order to release it from its cellular structure and drive out the moisture. It is therefore
not recommended as part of a daily RAF (Raw Animal Food) diet. However, it is a useful
compromise when one is traveling, for use as emergency rations, or when otherwise high-quality
raw animal foods are unavailable.
It is important that the lean meat used in pemmican be dehydrated at a temperature below 120
def F., and a temperature between 100 deg F. and 115 deg F. is ideal. Temperatures above 120
deg F. will “cook” the meat and will severely compromise the nutritional value of the pemmican.
Federal and State laws require commercial dried meat products like jerky to be raised to a
temperature above 150 deg F. which cooks the meat to a well-done state and makes it totally
unsuitable for making pemmican.
Nutritional Issues
The nutritional qualities of pemmican are unmatched when it is properly made. It can be eaten
for months or years as the only food and no nutritional deficiencies will develop. Yes, that is
correct, no fruits, vegetables, grains, or dairy products are required to maintain perfect health –
just properly made pemmican and water.
Vitamin C and scurvy is often brought up as a concern. Explorers, hunters, and Native
Americans have demonstrated over and over that consuming raw meat or meat that was dried at a
temperature below 120 deg F., as long as there is sufficient fat present to supply enough calories,
will maintain perfect health and prevent or cure scurvy. Those who consume salted and
preserved meats, biscuits, and other processed foods, even when lemon juice is added to their
diet, will often die from scurvy or other nutritional deficiencies.
Calcium and weak bones is another concern. Due to the advertising of the dairy industry, it is
believed that milk, cheese, or other dairy products are essential to maintaining good bone
density. It has been shown that people eating a diet of meat and fat, where the animal consumed
was allowed to eat its natural diet, (usually grass), bones developed normally and remained
strong with no sign of deterioration.
For the best quality pemmican, use red meat, (deer, beef, elk, bison, etc), and the rendered fat
from these same animals. The animals should be grass fed or have eaten their natural diet in the
wild. DO NOT include nuts, seeds, vegetable products, vegetable oils, grains, beans, or dairy
products of any kind. A small amount of well dried berries (blueberries, Saskatoon, strawberries,
etc) is the only acceptable addition and should not exceed 5% by weight should you choose to
include them.
Directions
Ingredients:
Equal amounts by weight of very dry red meat and rendered beef tallow. If you have one pound
of dried meat then you will need one pound of rendered beef tallow, two pounds of dried red
meat then two pounds of rendered beef tallow, etc.
Rendering the Fat
Rendering fat is a simple process and most of us are familiar with it as it is one of the end results
of frying bacon. The process of frying the bacon releases the fat from the cellular structure of
the meat and drives off the water. It is the boiling off of the water that actually makes bacon pop
and sizzle. The fat itself just turns to a liquid.
Our goal in our rendering process is a bit different from frying bacon in that it is the fat we wish
to keep rather than the crisp “cracklin’s”, which by the way taste good when they are still warm
with a bit of salt. If you don’t want them they make wonderful dog treats when cool.
We also want to keep the ultimate temperature of the fat as low as possible. I try to keep it
below 250 deg F. and usually shoot for a final temperature of around 240 deg F. You gain
nothing by raising the temperature any higher than 240-250 other than more damage to the fatty
acids which we want to avoid as much as possible. In short, you need the temperature high
enough to boil off the water in a reasonable length of time, but as low as practical to maintain the
nutritional value and not denature the structure of the fatty acids any more than necessary.
There are two generally accepted methods of rendering. One is to place the fat in a pot and heat
it on the stove top. The other is to place the fat in a roasting pan and put it in the oven with the
temperature set between 225 – 250 deg F.
The stove top method can be completed in about one hour and requires constant attention. The
oven method takes 12 hours or more, but can be left unattended during the entire process. I will
be covering the stove top method here with comments on the oven method mixed in but not
demonstrated.
Cut the fat into small pieces about ½” square. Place the diced fat in a stock pot or pan. I select
my pot size such that the raw fat fills the pot about ¾ full. This gives me head room to stir and
mix without slinging fat all over the stove or counter. It also fills the pot deep enough with the
liquid fat so that I can use a candy thermometer to keep track of the temperature.
If you are using the oven method just put your fat in a good sized roasting pan and pop it in the
oven set between 225 to 250 deg F and then go away for 12 to 24 hours. The oven thermostat
will take care of the temperature for you.
Set your burner to medium high heat and stir well about every minute or so for the first 10
minutes. This will keep the bottom from overheating while enough fat is being liberated to cover
the bottom of the pan.
After about 10 minutes you’ll see a pool of fat forming on the bottom which should be merrily
boiling away. You can now rest a bit and stir every 5 minutes or so just to keep things well
mixed.
After about 30 minutes the liquid fat should be deep enough to cover all the chunks and it should
have the appearance of a rolling boil. Reduce the temperature to medium heat and put a candy
thermometer into the fat making sure it does not touch the bottom of the pan. The water boiling
off the fat will keep the temperature around 220 deg F for a while, but there will come a point
where the temperature will start rising.
Keep stirring occasionally and keep your eye on the thermometer. As it begins to rise, lower the
heat setting to keep the temperature around 230 to 240 deg F. The picture above is after about 45
minutes. The cracklin’s are beginning to turn dark in color, the boiling is slowing down, and the
temperature of the fat is rising requiring close attention to the heat setting.
After about one hour the major boiling action will have stopped and there will just be small
bubbles rising from the fat. 90% of the cracklin’s will be a chestnut brown color. The lighter
chunks may have a bit more fat left in them, but it is not worth the effort to extract it. If you did
the oven method, the fat in your roasting pan should have a similar look.
Now take a good sized strainer and place it the container where you will store your rendered fat.
Line the strainer with a single layer of paper towel. This will filter out the sediment and just
allow the liquid fat to drip through.
From your pot or roasting pan pour the fat, cracklin’s and all, into the lined strainer. Press on the
cracklin’s with a serving spoon to press as much fat out of them as possible.
When you’ve gotten all the fat you can, remove the strainer and set the container aside to cool.
You can sprinkle the cracklin’s with a bit of salt and pepper and enjoy them as a snack, set them
aside to cool for dog treats, or discard as you wish.

The square tub on the left is tallow that was rendered from the fat of grass fed animals. It is a
deep butter yellow from the caritinoids (the fat soluble vitamin “A” precursor that gives carrots
their orange color) that gets stored in the animal’s fat from the green grass they eat. The round
bucket on the right is the tallow we just rendered from fat that I got from a local market. The
putty color is typical of the fat rendered from grain fed animals. There is little or no carotene
stored in the fat of grain fed animals.
There is also a major difference in the fatty acid profile of grain-fed vs grass-fed animals. The
grass fed animal fat is between 25 and 50 percent healthy Omega 3 fatty acids. The grain fed
animal’s fat is only 2 to 3 percent Omega 3. Omega 3 fatty acids are critical to the development
and maintenance of our brain and nerve tissue. Overall, the meat and fat from grass fed animals
has far greater nutritional value than grain fed beef. Therefore, if you want to make pemmican
that meets all nutritional requirements without the need for additional supplementation, both the
lean meat and the fat should come from grass fed animals.
Dried Meat Preparation
To make any useful amount of pemmican, a large quantity of well dehydrated lean meat is
required which does not lend itself to the use of small tray-type food dehydrators. The plans for
a simple dehydrator that can be built for less than $20 and will hold a full 10 pounds of raw meat
is available here: http://www.rawpaleodiet.com/uploads/Jerk...ctions.pdf
These plans also give full instructions for dehydrating meat at low temperature for making jerky,
or if the meat is left unseasoned, for making pemmican. Generally, well dried meat will weigh
just slightly less than 1/3 of its raw weight. Therefore, 10 pounds of raw lean meat will yield
about 3 lbs of thoroughly dehydrated meat. Since pemmican is 50% fat and 50% dried meat by
weight, 3 pounds of dried meat will make 6 pounds of pemmican which will be equal to about 18
pounds of fresh meat.
Start with well dried red meat. Beef, Bison, Deer, Elk, etc. Make sure that the strips of meat
are thoroughly dry all the way through. Any observable moisture in the meat will provide an
environment for mold and bacteria to grow. If the strips of meat are bent double they should
crack and not be rubbery.
Traditionally the meat used for pemmican is dried without salt or any other seasoning. If you
choose to season your meat I suggest that you go very lightly – less than half of what you
would use for jerky. Use only dry spices like garlic powder, pepper, cumin, chili powder,
and salt etc. NEVER, NEVER, NEVER make pemmican with meat that has been marinated
in soy sauce, wine, or any marinade that contains sugar of any kind, and no vegetable oils of
any type. I always make my pemmican without salt or seasoning and usually prefer eating it
that way, but on occasion sprinkle a bit of salt or steak seasoning on it at the time I eat it for a
change of pace – be careful, a little bit of seasoning goes a long way in this dense food.
Grind the meat to a fibrous consistency like a fluffy, but slightly chunky mulch. I use a meat
grinder with the largest plate (biggest holes) possible. The grinder above is a large #32
manual ChopRite with a 1 ½ horsepower motor in place of the handle, and fitted with a
“bean” plate that has 3 very large oval holes. If you attempt to use a plate with small holes,
(½” may work, ¾” or larger is much better), the holes will clog, the grinder could lock-up,
and you may damage it. Feed one strip at a time and wait until the exit holes begin to clear
before adding the next strip. If it is too chunky and not well shredded, run it through a
second time.
Alternatively you can shred the meat in a food processor using the steel blade, or in a
blender. When using these options it will be helpful to chop the dried meat into smaller
pieces, and some people pick up the blender and shake it while grinding to keep the unground
chunks moving into the blades for a more even grind.
Traditionally the dry meat was pounded into a powder using rocks. I’ve tried the pounding
method using a hammer and a small blacksmith’s anvil. Unless you have a lot of time and
need the exercise I don’t recommend it. It is a lot of work.

Weigh the amount of ground meat that you have and then weigh out an equal amount of
rendered animal fat from the rendering process above. Fat from red meat animals is
preferable for best nutrition and keeping qualities as it becomes very firm when cool –
similar to candle wax. No vegetable oils or butter should be used. Pork or lamb fat can be
used but are not recommended as the fatty acid profile is different and they melt at too low a
temperature. This can cause the fat and lean to separate in warm weather, so storage
becomes a problem unless you are willing to pack the pemmican in liquid tight containers.
Melt the fat on low heat. It will start to melt at about 120 deg F. Try to keep the temperature
of the fat below 150 deg F. You spent time drying the lean meat at low temperature to
maintain its nutritional value so you don’t want to deep fry it when you mix it with the fat.
Mix the shredded meat into the melted fat and stir until well blended.
The completed mixture should look much like moist crumbled brownies. The mixture may
look “wet” but most of the fat should be absorbed or coating the meat fibers – there should be
little or no liquid fat pooling in the bottom of the pan.
Using a sturdy spoon, press the warm mixture into a mold of your choice, or spoon into a
Ziploc plastic bag and press flat, removing as much air as possible. The grey colored molds
above are mini loaf pans that are slightly larger than a cube of butter and hold about 150
grams (1000 total calories) of pemmican. The Ziploc bags are sandwich sized and are loaded
with about 300 grams (2000 total calories). When pressed flat they are about 5” x 6” x ½”
thick. Set aside to let cool and harden. The final product will be very hard – almost like a
block of wax - and will look a bit like dark oatmeal with some ground raisins stirred in.
If you are using molds such as cupcake tins or loaf pans as above, the pemmican can be
removed from the mold once it is hardened and then stored in plastic bags or wrapped in a
grease proof paper. One convenient method I often use is to press the mixture into lined
cupcake pans and then store the resulting hockey pucks with their paper liners in gallon sized
Ziploc plastic bags. Each cupcake in a standard cupcake pan will hold about 75-80 grams
(around 500 calories) if you pack them solid to the top.
If you want to keep your pemmican for any length of time, it should be stored in a dark place
or wrapped in light tight paper or aluminum foil as well as placed in a plastic bag to keep out
air and moisture. Pemmican does not require refrigeration and can be kept for years at room
temperature as long as it is kept dry, and shielded from light and direct heat.
How Much Do I Need?
One half ( ½ ) pound of pemmican per day is about the minimum required for a sedentary
adult and provides about 1,500 calories. Someone doing light activities might find ¾ pound
more appropriate to their needs and this would provide about 2,200 calories. Twice this
amount (or more) could easily be necessary when doing hard physical labor (think digging
ditches or mountain climbing).
Pemmican is the perfect food for backpacking and hiking. Ten pounds of pemmican will
easily sustain a backpacker for a full week providing 1 ½ pounds of pemmican per day which
would supply 4,400 calories – enough to support strenuous climbing at high altitude and in
cold weather. The same 10 pounds of pemmican would supply food for two full weeks of
leisure camping activities at ¾ pound per day providing 2,200 calories.
When made correctly, using grass fed lean red meat, dried at a temperature below 120 deg F.,
and rendered fat from grass fed animals, pemmican is a complete food and no other nutrients
or supplements are necessary to completely meet all human nutritional requirements. No
other single food is as calorie dense or nutritionally complete.
[-] The following 1 user Likes Hissil's post:
  • Richard
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#5
Pemmican Recipe by CrotaLikesRomComs

You could find some seasonings for the pemmican. It doesn’t need to be shelf stable for 20 years. I made a batch with the same ingredients. Ground beef, tallow, salt. The flavor was ok but i absolutely loved the texture and it was extremely satiating.

I’m no pemmican expert I think most have a slight crunch to them.

Anyways my technique is just purchasing rendered fat online. I bought a 1.5 lbs bucket my first time. Suet. Most tallow purchased online is suet (kidney fat).

First cook lean (93%) ground beef I did over 3 pounds for a batch (this was 3lbs originally came down under a pound once you eventually dry it). Cook fully.

Then put cooked burger in strainer and drain the fat out. Can save that fat if you want but won’t be used for making your pemmican batch. It’s not rendered.

Then grab handfuls out of strainer and wrap/pat/rub handfuls at a time in paper towels getting some of the moisture off. Don’t need to be perfect with this, it just helps speed up the drying process.

As you hand dry burger break it into smaller pieces and place them on wax paper on a dehydrator rack. Once again this doesn’t need to be perfect just speeds up the drying process the smaller the pieces are.

I dried it on 145 degrees Fahrenheit. Apologies if you don’t use our stupid system. I dried for about 9 hours.

I did check on it a couple times during the drying process just to break apart some of the bigger pieces since it’s so much easier to do so when they are semi dry.

You will know it’s dry when even the bigger pieces fall apart easily.

Once it’s all dry, blend it somewhat finely. But not too fine otherwise you won’t get that good crunch. Another part that you can’t really mess up. Just blend it fine.

Then finally slowly warm the rendered fat you purchased to liquid form on the stove. Add rendered fat almost at a 1-1 ratio per volume in a mixing bowl or in the container you want to keep it in. Also add salt or whatever other shelf stable seasonings you want. Once again you can’t really mess this part up. Both the rendered fat and the dried protein are shelf stable as well. So at this point it’s about how much fat, salt, and other seasonings you want. Use your best judgment. I think I slightly under salted my first batch and slightly too lean.

To explain a little better. If you plan on putting it into a glass container like a brownie, then just mix it in that container and spread evenly. You could make pemmican balls too. Obviously the shape doesn’t matter.

Good luck. It sounds a little complicated but once you do it once it’s easy!
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