Making Pemmican - The Ultimate Survival Food

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 1. 06. 2024
  • Welcome back. Today we are making the Ultimate survival food - Pemmican. This is a great food to know how to make as it is very calorie dense, light weight, packed with protein, has a long shelf life outside of refrigeration, and gives lots of energy.
    If you don't want to make it but would like some Pemmican: amzn.to/3rIJma8
    For a printable version of this recipe: twoguysandacooler.com/pemmican...
    Also be Sure to check out our Amazon Store front to see all the things we use: www.amazon.com/shop/2guysacooler
    Kotai Chef Knife: tinyurl.com/5ypnfjp7 (for 15% off use discount code - 2guys )
    Extra Large Mortar & Pestle: amzn.to/3q0vW7N
    Dehydrator: amzn.to/35mApKl
    Crock Pot: amzn.to/3aVSGyi
    Cheese cloth: amzn.to/3aWcb9P
    Beef Tallow Suet: amzn.to/3jFnqtp
    Bella's Cold Smoke Generator: amzn.to/2INfLan
    Vitamix Blender: amzn.to/3nvlBiy
    Meat Grinder We use the #22 amzn.to/2MGd1QD
    Vacmaster Vacuum Sealer amzn.to/2wQp7wF
    8x10 bags for vac master amzn.to/2NQxpuU
    6x8 bags for vac master amzn.to/2y72Lrk
    Items we use frequently:
    MK4 Thermapen (Accurate Thermometer): tinyurl.com/3mfs3jnk
    Small accurate Scale for spices: tinyurl.com/rcr3e4c7
    Insta Cure #1: amzn.to/32IxBsF
    Sausage Stuffers: tinyurl.com/56hhauzh
    Meat Grinder: tinyurl.com/59cmk5d6
    Smokers (I use the 4D WIFI): tinyurl.com/29hbu6wp
    Butcher Twine & Dispenser: amzn.to/35QFhIa
    Stuffing Horn Cleaners for your sausage stuffer: tinyurl.com/3atajmzf
    Stainless Steel hooks: amzn.to/33ZSzDW
    Sausage Pricker: amzn.to/3rdzCqs
    Ph Meter by Apera Instruments: amzn.to/2A04Gll
    Heavy Duty Vac Sealer: amzn.to/2WUALpO
    Smokin-It Bella's Cold Smoke Generator: amzn.to/2UVTsX9
    Custom Cutting Board: tinyurl.com/3ez3ww7f
    If you would like to support our work, you can do so in several ways:
    1. Like, Subscribe, and share this video
    2. Use our amazon link to get to amazon to make your purchases: amzn.to/3dqScEy
    3. You can help support our channel through PayPal: tinyurl.com/5yfhhyce
    4. Patreon (where you get all sorts of cool discounts from companies you're most likely already buying from: / 2guysandacooler
    If you need anything from Amazon, you can help us out by using this link to get there: www.amazon.com/shop/2guysacooler
    Here are a few more things we use in our projects:
    AMAZON LINKS:
    Ph Meter by Apera Instruments: amzn.to/2A04Gll
    Heavy Duty Vac Sealer: amzn.to/2WUALpO
    Smokin-It Bella's Cold Smoke Generator: amzn.to/2UVTsX9
    Meat Slicer: amzn.to/31XV19q
    Vitamix 750 Heritage Pro Model amzn.to/2PFXe1d
    Edge Pro Professional knife sharpening Kit #3 amzn.to/2NvAO24
    Iwatani Professional Chef Torch: amzn.to/2zUzm4E
    InkBird Controllers temp & Humidity amzn.to/2O3BmM7
    Dehumidifier Eva Dry 1100 amzn.to/2TDvChj
    Cool Mist Humidifier: amzn.to/3CD6nAu
    Govee Temperature/Humidity Monitor: amzn.to/3v55Tz1
    Iodophor sanitizer: amzn.to/2Q9jFBM
    Commercial grade Sous Vide: amzn.to/2QDYGGU
    Chamber Vacuum Sealer: amzn.to/2wQp7wF
    Butcher Twine & Dispenser: amzn.to/35QFhIa
    Robot Coupe Food Processor (high end): amzn.to/3fmmEPm
    Hobart Edge Deli Slicer (high end): amzn.to/3lRYTB7
    EQUIPMENT LINKS
    Sausage Stuffers: tinyurl.com/56hhauzh
    Meat Grinder: tinyurl.com/59cmk5d6
    Small accurate Scale for spices: tinyurl.com/rcr3e4c7
    Large Capacity Scale: tinyurl.com/mr23dhsd
    Stainless Steel Dutch Cheese Press: tinyurl.com/y7r4xmuw
    Hand heald vac sealer: tinyurl.com/2snae9af
    Heavy Duty Vac Sealer: amzn.to/2WUALpO
    Thermapen Mk4 - tinyurl.com/3mfs3jnk
    DOT Kitchen Temperature Reader - tinyurl.com/3pxtc6
    Extra Big and Loud Kitchen Timer/Alarm - tinyurl.com/4xcj9wcw
    Thank you for watching. If you are new here, consider subscribing and clicking that notification bell. See you in another video.
    Eric
    (Some of these links are affiliate links. This means we get a small commission if you make a purchase using the links we provide. This really helps support our channel at no cost to you. Thank you in advance)

Komentáře • 5K

  • @2guysandacooler
    @2guysandacooler  Před 3 lety +809

    We've had a lot of requests to see me make a "low tech" version of pemmican. So to all who asked, we just finished that video and you can see me make pemmican with any modern appliances or even electricity AND I'll even show you how to cook up a tasty dinner with pemmican. You can see it here: czcams.com/video/xik1arbTPRk/video.html
    That version of Pemmican has a shelf life of +25 years
    Printable recipe: twoguysandacooler.com/pemmican-the-ultimate-survival-food/

    • @metalmulishaz123
      @metalmulishaz123 Před 3 lety +10

      Can you use wagyu beef tallow make pemmican?

    • @2guysandacooler
      @2guysandacooler  Před 3 lety +8

      @@metalmulishaz123 sure

    • @samsowden
      @samsowden Před 3 lety +15

      @@metalmulishaz123 the question is why?

    • @keithedwards9953
      @keithedwards9953 Před 3 lety +12

      May I ask... how does combining the dried fruit into the pemmican affect the shelf life? How long does it last with the fruit mixed in?

    • @solomondavid6973
      @solomondavid6973 Před 3 lety +14

      just outta curiosity, what would the addition of honey do?

  • @DaZebraffe
    @DaZebraffe Před 3 lety +6803

    To those complaining about how dry and bland it is: That's because it's not supposed to be eaten like a nutrient bar, like this guy did. (Not saying it's wrong to do that, you do you...Just that that's not how it was used by the people who invented it.) It was basically the Native American version of trail rations and, like trail rations, it was meant to be combined with whatever local ingredients you could forage wherever you stopped to eat, to make a proper meal of. In the case of pemmican, it would typically be thrown into a pot of boiling water, with or without some local vegetation for texture and/or flavor, and cooked into a kind of soup.
    Edit: 'kay, since it keeps getting said "Oh, so it's like boullion?" I'mma' add in here...Sort of, but it's really more like an MRE, or an instant soup mix.

    • @___xyz___
      @___xyz___ Před 3 lety +392

      I don't know about native diet. But in general the most important factor in health is attitude towards food. The healthiest people are the ones for which food is prepared with great care and eaten as though sacred. That kind of respect for diet generally results in a healthy population on many levels.

    • @richardm3023
      @richardm3023 Před 3 lety +460

      @@___xyz___ I think you're describing McDonald's.

    • @jc4jax
      @jc4jax Před 3 lety +334

      so it was an early version of the bouillon cube

    • @WaspMedia3D
      @WaspMedia3D Před 3 lety +152

      @@richardm3023 Yes indeed, the amount of great care that goes into preparing chemicals and processed fillers and additives is unmatched by Mcdonalds ...

    • @___xyz___
      @___xyz___ Před 3 lety +80

      @@richardm3023 Haha, I don't know about McDonald's, but the French and the Japanese, who have food tradition embedded in their culture and vocabulary, do fairly well, if I must say so myself.

  • @SjorsHoukes
    @SjorsHoukes Před 3 lety +4406

    “You’re gonna see how easy it is to make”
    *commences 18 hour process with 2 types of very particular meat that includes special smoking and drying equipment*

    • @axnoro
      @axnoro Před 3 lety +830

      First you take the dinglepop and smooth it out with a bunch of schleem...

    • @dankennerson2080
      @dankennerson2080 Před 3 lety +266

      True, the way he did it, but this could be replicated with a campfire for all the smoking, the summer sun for drying the fruit, and a mortal and pestle for grinding, and a bowl for the mixing and heating of the fat.
      My understanding is that the plains indians didn't render the fat, and didn't necessarily grind the fruit, but kneaded the fruit and meat into the fat on a warm day. Not sure how true this is, but it really is a fairly simple process.

    • @Andytlp
      @Andytlp Před 3 lety +17

      @@axnoro LOOOOOOOL.

    • @Andytlp
      @Andytlp Před 3 lety +97

      Yeah but imagine how natives made it originally. Must spent like a week making it. In large enough quantities to feed the entire tribe.

    • @irrelevancepersonified6973
      @irrelevancepersonified6973 Před 3 lety +62

      @@axnoro Always wondered how plumbuses were made!

  • @floydsadler3559
    @floydsadler3559 Před 10 měsíci +19

    My people make the same thing but we call it “wasna” and there was a bundle found in a shelter that was estimated to be over 100 years old and the wasna or pemmican was still edible! My relatives used wild choke cherries, wild turnips, buffalo lard and smoked buffalo meat.

    • @chesterricherson3565
      @chesterricherson3565 Před měsícem +2

      Mine did the same thing.,..Blackfoot here....

    • @normanbenjamin9739
      @normanbenjamin9739 Před 9 dny

      Nova Scotia my ancestors made the same ! And i'm sure the way things are going we will be making more as the Times get harder .

  • @JohnJohn-wr1jo
    @JohnJohn-wr1jo Před 2 lety +141

    My grandfather made "pemmican" primarily from deer meat, raisins,dried blueberry,pecans, walnuts, and sunflower seed. Dont recall beef tallow but possibly could have. All of which were gathered vs buying at a store. Probably some other ingredients that I have forgotten since he passed over 50 years ago. I just wished I would have been more interested in how it was made and had the recipie. He would always have a big hunk of it when we spent the day in the woods hunting or on a fishing trip. It was rarely brought out and eaten until all other foods were consumed. It was more of a reserve food if you ran out of everything else and were hungry or needed a pick me up. I had completely forgot about it until I saw your video. Thanks

    • @scream-beam3519
      @scream-beam3519 Před rokem

      instead of beef tallow what else did he use?

    • @sunriserascal2755
      @sunriserascal2755 Před rokem +1

      Yes, he used beef tallow. How do I know? Because deer tallow tastes rancid to the human tongue.

    • @starlight4649
      @starlight4649 Před rokem

      Careful with sunflower seeds, the oil will go rancid pretty fast

    • @skalle1448
      @skalle1448 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@sunriserascal2755really? That's so interesting, I wonder why that is.

    • @Kebutor
      @Kebutor Před 5 měsíci

      The seeds and nuts had some oil in side them so they too were used as a substitute possibly.

  • @ljss6805
    @ljss6805 Před 2 lety +1697

    I'm from Mexico. We use something called alegrias, which are basically just dried fruits (usually raisins), honey, and amaranth. A bar of that will keep you on your feet for hours, and is probably the lightest kind of food you could ever pack. I'm glad to see our friends to the north also developed their own form of travel bar.

    • @alcubz2622
      @alcubz2622 Před 2 lety +17

      What's the shelf life for Alegrias?

    • @Vnfy
      @Vnfy Před 2 lety +8

      And your people got it long before fancy americans made CZcams clips.

    • @ljss6805
      @ljss6805 Před 2 lety +39

      @@Vnfy Yes.

    • @Noah-pk7tf
      @Noah-pk7tf Před 2 lety +6

      @@Vnfy what

    • @DoraTheMFDestroya
      @DoraTheMFDestroya Před 2 lety +19

      @@Vnfy uh, pemican was made during the time of the pilgrims?

  • @Jaylucky777
    @Jaylucky777 Před 3 lety +1456

    Totally like the Rimworld music. Fitting for this video.

    • @brandond5441
      @brandond5441 Před 3 lety +23

      I know right lol

    • @ThesmartestTem
      @ThesmartestTem Před 3 lety +110

      As a rimwolrd player who just made pemmican, I approve this comment.

    • @greasysteve5671
      @greasysteve5671 Před 3 lety +102

      hey at least he had a table lmao

    • @ThesmartestTem
      @ThesmartestTem Před 3 lety +59

      @@greasysteve5671 true. Pemmican and no table is just asking for a mental break.

    • @greasysteve5671
      @greasysteve5671 Před 3 lety +32

      @@ThesmartestTem it's the greatest war crime of all lmao

  • @Honk5555
    @Honk5555 Před rokem +378

    Even the music fits the Rimworld universe. Great tutorial, gonna have to try this.

    • @mota478
      @mota478 Před rokem +45

      I knew this comment would exist. Mood -15 eating without a Table👌

    • @AViewCado69420
      @AViewCado69420 Před rokem +29

      @@mota478 only in rimworld where eating without a table is more mood debuff than a your colonist seeing his friend/rival die

    • @snackie1359
      @snackie1359 Před rokem +14

      Came to the comments to find the rimworld peeps and was not disappointed

    • @jgats
      @jgats Před rokem +6

      hello brothers

    • @RealityBackHand
      @RealityBackHand Před rokem +6

      I knew I wasn't the only one who clicked on the video because of my local war crime simulator

  • @jomomma7616
    @jomomma7616 Před 2 lety +41

    Anyone else think it's funny that you have to grease a pan to make cakes pop out easy but when you have a tray full of grease it doesn't pop out easy unless you line it 😂

    • @roxrequiem2935
      @roxrequiem2935 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Its because if the pan of grease would harden and cause cavitation when pulled out hence difficult to remove, unlike a greased pan when it hardens it melts a little on contact with the pan so it makes things slide off easier

  • @user-uz9cr9oj7v
    @user-uz9cr9oj7v Před 4 lety +2401

    The manliest brownies

  • @exudeku
    @exudeku Před 3 lety +893

    Me, a warcrimina...uh...a Rimworld Player: Hey, I've seen this before

    • @heshiram1188
      @heshiram1188 Před 3 lety +66

      That's how I even know what Pemmican is lmfao

    • @zacharyrollick6169
      @zacharyrollick6169 Před 3 lety +47

      I admit that I imprison pirates, cut off their limbs so that they can't escape, and constantly perform surgery on them to train my doctors. If the pirates are teenagers, I brainwash them and then turn them into killer cyborgs in power armor.

    • @twomillion8383
      @twomillion8383 Před 3 lety +30

      Man @ 5:14 that guitar riff brought me to Rimworld straight away. Tribal start here I come.

    • @whizthesugoi
      @whizthesugoi Před 3 lety

      Cant like so i comment

    • @justinharrington7842
      @justinharrington7842 Před 3 lety +7

      Listen, I only harvested a few organs, and they weren’t even using them! I think...

  • @tamasmihaly1
    @tamasmihaly1 Před rokem +8

    I can imagine being truly hungry and how great this would taste. Thanks.

  • @SuperCrazyEstonian
    @SuperCrazyEstonian Před 2 lety +63

    Not only does it pack calories, it packs nutrients. The higher quality the ingredients are, the better the pemmican is!

  • @jayvaughnpelonio3707
    @jayvaughnpelonio3707 Před 3 lety +2826

    NOW WE KNOW HOW TO MAKE PEMMICAN, WE CAN BOARD SPACE SHIP BOUND TO ANOTHER RIMWORLD

    • @robrib2682
      @robrib2682 Před 3 lety +195

      You joke, but that's the only other place that I heard about this stuff before today

    • @Bassivor
      @Bassivor Před 3 lety +56

      This is exactly what I thought of

    • @shanebrewer1565
      @shanebrewer1565 Před 3 lety +99

      I've actually eaten this before. I used to do history reenacting. But rimworld is the reason I'm watching this lol

    • @notrackscntfndme6156
      @notrackscntfndme6156 Před 3 lety +8

      Hey guys we know someone who is not in group one...... I said to much

    • @matthewkoehn5242
      @matthewkoehn5242 Před 3 lety +15

      Do you make it for the space journey or would you save it for the colonization of the planet?

  • @Follower_of_The_Word
    @Follower_of_The_Word Před 2 lety +921

    I began making pemmican 43 years ago using a different recipe and it was amazingly good! I used homemade venison jerky and some dried berries. I cut the jerky into small pieces but did not pulverize it. Same for the fruit, leave it whole. Pour rendered tallow over the mixture and form in a cookie sheet in a thin layer. You can taste everything, and it is really good to eat. I think the pulverized stuff has a strange texture and flavors are too blended together.
    It’s a shame that saturated animal fats have been so demonized, they are the healthiest fats on earth!

    • @bachempenius
      @bachempenius Před 2 lety +56

      People living close to nature under harsh conditions would certainly agree. You use what is available.

    • @ricardoh87
      @ricardoh87 Před 2 lety +151

      animal fats are 100% healthier than processed vegetable oils

    • @MsJess-xs7kt
      @MsJess-xs7kt Před 2 lety +59

      It was intentional. Bc they knew already that it made mammals diabetes and cancer prone to remove full fat from the diet and make the biggest portion of recommended diet carbs. The food pyramid is upside down for a very intentional reason

    • @bradroon5538
      @bradroon5538 Před 2 lety +20

      Lard is #8 on the nutrient density scale according to nutritionists

    • @mothertwinkles4198
      @mothertwinkles4198 Před 2 lety +29

      I agree with you about animal fats. I've been married 17 years and my husband has just given up margarine.

  • @yungfiend6830
    @yungfiend6830 Před 8 měsíci +3

    I remember as a boy scout on a long canoeing trip my scout leader brought pemmican. First time and only time I’ve had it but I was always curious what it was made of. His had some nuts in it and raisins. Very energizing after long 1 mile portages in muddy conditions. I still love the outdoors and doing tough trips though this will definitely come in handy. Thank you for your knowledge.

  • @RandomNooby
    @RandomNooby Před 2 lety +3

    My grandfather taught me how to make this as a child, and I long ago forgot. My 16 year old watched this recently and taught me how to make it again. Thanks

  • @albertawildcat3164
    @albertawildcat3164 Před 3 lety +354

    Interesting video, many years ago I was part of a volunteer Archeological survey being done on the North Saskatchewan river. One of our volunteers came across an old cache some old fur trader had left buried in the river bank. We dug it out and the archeologist supervising the project said it had been left there about 140 years ago! It had gun powder, shot, knives, hatchets, a couple of traps, some vermillion, flints a tinder box and of course Pemican. Amazingly all were in remarkably good condition and mostly still useable, even the pemican apparently. Everything had been wrapped in animal hide and packed inside a buffalo robe and then in a wooden barrel. One of the guys even tried the pemican...said it tasted ok, I took his word for it.

    • @Y0G0FU
      @Y0G0FU Před 3 lety +45

      Pemmican made the right way will basically last forever if you keep it dry and away from Air as youve seen with that barrel. Its an incredible thing.

    • @karenvictoriawilliams8123
      @karenvictoriawilliams8123 Před 3 lety +21

      Incredible! Thanks so much for sharing!

    • @pl7868
      @pl7868 Před 2 lety +11

      @@Y0G0FU be further ahead getting a can of spam ,bag of rice,an some twinkies really

    • @pl7868
      @pl7868 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Y0G0FU except this video isn't about pemmican it's about what people living now would make for a long lasting food has nothing to do with pemmican except the concept of long lasting food and pemmican wasn't

    • @bobbyhullfan1077
      @bobbyhullfan1077 Před 2 lety +14

      What did they do with the cache? Is it in a museum or something?

  • @jojozepofthejungle2655
    @jojozepofthejungle2655 Před 2 lety +782

    My dad made another survival food from suet mix and dried fruit. He made it every time we went camping, incase something happened to us. He's an ex navy seal lol. All he did on these holidays, was teach us how to survive, we made everything from scratch, ate what we could catch, slept outside, it was quite the adventure.

    • @marythibault9032
      @marythibault9032 Před 2 lety +52

      I bet you have some wonderful memories of those adventures

    • @joolspools777
      @joolspools777 Před 2 lety +8

      Wow..what an adventure

    • @jasonmacneil2256
      @jasonmacneil2256 Před 2 lety +14

      Are you SURE he was a Navy seal? Call Don Shipley!!

    • @Sagittarius-A-Star
      @Sagittarius-A-Star Před 2 lety +2

      You Americans are blessed with your huge empty spaces and thus the possibility to camp and "getting in danger".
      Completely opposite to crammed Europe.

    • @joshuarutledge2707
      @joshuarutledge2707 Před 2 lety +7

      That's awesome

  • @NadesikoRose
    @NadesikoRose Před 2 měsíci +1

    You can also try powdered nuts along with the powdered fruit, plus sea salt if you don’t want to use table salt. Basically whatever you have on hand, no need to go out to the store to get stuff unless you are out….

  • @elizaleroux9173
    @elizaleroux9173 Před 2 lety +2

    You can if you don't want to use the hard fat, use pure honey and bake it for 40 minutes in a medium oven... The reason why they originally used the fat was because they didn't have sealed containers those days.. Honey is a natural product and does the same binding. We add sesame seeds and make it much thinner like a "shop health bar"... Happy to see others making this wonder food.

  • @PancorRath
    @PancorRath Před 3 lety +274

    i play a survival game called Rim World and always wondered "the heck is Pemmican?" then just got my survivors making piles of it to live off of until i could get better foods. kinda neat to finally see what i was making them virtually eat now

    • @Ghorda9
      @Ghorda9 Před 3 lety +12

      i only use it when i sent some pawns off to trade beer with someone.

    • @reklessbravo2129
      @reklessbravo2129 Před 3 lety +8

      I never used much of it because I always got a freezer going pretty quickly, but if you can't do that pemmican is amazing

    • @Ghorda9
      @Ghorda9 Před 3 lety +8

      @@reklessbravo2129 can't use a freezer for travel.

    • @exudeku
      @exudeku Před 3 lety +4

      @@Ghorda9 true, especially if you dont have orbital trade early on

    • @berner
      @berner Před 3 lety +9

      So does that mean you gave your survivors Rim jobs?

  • @johnathancorgan3994
    @johnathancorgan3994 Před 4 lety +790

    Oh, you made a video on pemmican, a subject near and dear to my heart. I've been making it for years, and it's nice to see someone with actual professional skills and equipment doing it. Some notes:
    The traditional method used by Native Americans rarely used fruit; they'd slaughter a buffalo, convert as much of the meat and fat to pemmican as they could, then save it in pouches made from the hide. The fruit was added to the recipe later when trading with European fur traders as they were unaccustomed to the lack of flavor.
    Also, as you noted briefly, you used hard fat. This is almost essential for shelf stability, as it has the highest amount of saturated fat that resists oxidation and rancidity. I've had the best success with suet or kidney fat, and that's hard to come by for me. Also, the fruit content must be completely dry and powdered for this to work, otherwise residual water will cause spoilage (as you also noted.)
    From a nutritional perspective, pemmican makes an excellent part of a ketogenic diet, if made with this in mind. The typical recipe is 50/50 percent by weight of tallow and meat powder (no fruit). This results in a product that has about 70% of its caloric value from fat, 30% from protein, and 0% from carbohydrates. This does result in a greasier, oilier (when eaten) product than some people like, but I've personally found that like any pemmican it is an acquired taste.
    Finally, I've never tried it, but I *love* the idea of smoking the meat while drying it! The challenge with pemmican is that you don't really want to cook the meat, you just want to make it devoid of any moisture. The lack of moisture and access to oxygen, as well as the added salt, prevents any sort of bacterial growth, so I'm happy to set the dehydrator at 105F and not worry about trying to get the meat up to more typical cooking temperature.
    Sorry for the wall of text, but I love this stuff. It's way too labor intensive, and I wish it were commercially sold the proper way, but the FDA will not allow commercial producers to sell what they would consider raw meat if done properly.
    Thanks again for video!

    • @2guysandacooler
      @2guysandacooler  Před 4 lety +70

      Excellent points Johnathan. The fat I ended up using was the kidney fat and it wreaked havoc on my grinder small plates. It was too hard. Had to go wide open just to get it through😁.
      You are right about acquired taste. I personally liked the high fat content. Nice coating on the inside of the mouth. Next time I make it I'll do only beef and fat.
      It's such a neat food to make... Thanks for the awesome comment...

    • @johnathancorgan3994
      @johnathancorgan3994 Před 4 lety +32

      @@2guysandacooler One commercial pemmican producer mentioned in email to me that they have to use 5% muscle fat to soften up the suet for the same reason.
      If you ever decide to make this stuff in volume, you've got a customer :-)

    • @chiledoug
      @chiledoug Před 4 lety +9

      I just bought some Carne Seca - Machaca @ $30 a # a bit pricey but really cuts down the labor great flavor too I add fruit have dried blueberry/cherry..and add a dribble of maple syrup Tastes like candy

    • @christianrivera5827
      @christianrivera5827 Před 4 lety +14

      Thanks bro. Your explanation is great addition to his video.

    • @wolfchacer0139
      @wolfchacer0139 Před 4 lety +19

      Great post, however the FDA would lying and fully incorrect if they were to say this is raw in way shape or form. While the human body has a hard time with raw meat, pemmican is technically cooked as the removing of the moisture is a method cooking (rare meat is bad for the digestive system). Authentic Pemmican was made using a fire with the meat hung high above it so as to dehydrate the meat not sear it (As I said it's actually a method of cooking so realistically it's not raw). I love these types of videos and learn so much forgotten things from you as well as others, always a nice time learning old new things ;)

  • @tomhill4003
    @tomhill4003 Před rokem +5

    Thanks for the recipe! I made this when I was a young boy scout. Truly amazing stuff, and an amazing survival food. I seem to recall putting brown sugar in it along with the salt. I never used it for survival, but it made a great snack food! Dried cherries and cranberries are a great addition as well.

  • @robertfranklin7040
    @robertfranklin7040 Před 2 lety +4

    I've totally seen pre-rendered beef tallow for sale many, many times at the local Winco market.

  • @charitysheppard4549
    @charitysheppard4549 Před 3 lety +355

    Just a quick cooking hint: I learned this from Asian cooks, and the end result is a little bit cleaner. When rendering their fats, they will do a quick 30-45 sec pre-boil. This coagulates the inter-vascular blood into a foam. That way, you clarify out the blood, which would be too small to catch in your final stages. Pull the fat out, give it a quick drain and rinse, then carry on rendering. I LOVE your slow cooker idea!

    • @87Sakiel
      @87Sakiel Před 3 lety +10

      and how you do that? id love to know more!

    • @broutefoin
      @broutefoin Před 3 lety +34

      @@87Sakiel bring a pot of water to a boil, dumb all your fat chunks into the water for 30-45 sec, dump the whole bot into a strainer, rince of the fat chunks in with cold water till the water coming through the strainer is clear, then dump your fat chunks into the crockpot to render as normal.

    • @charitysheppard4549
      @charitysheppard4549 Před 3 lety +40

      @@87Sakiel it's actually very easy. Asian cooks, Chinese in particular, will blanch meats and fats before cooking. It removes the coagulated blood, and many believe any "gamey" flavors prior to the real cooking, leaving you with a cleaner, and better tasting, dish. To blanch the fats, just cut it into cubes as detailed in the video, bring about 6 quarts of water per 1 lb of fat, to a full boil. Then, carefully drop in the fats to quickly cook for 30-45 seconds then drain. Rinse with cold water then render as usual. The left over greaves will have a cleaner pork flavor. If you are cooking a dish with meats, you always blanch the meat with ginger, green onions and Chinese cooking wine (you can use dry sherry in a bind). The meat goes into cold water with the ginger, onion and wine. Bring to boil and cook 5 minutes or so. Drain the meat and then rinse off all the scum with cold water. Drain, then make your dish. It is an extra little step but it really does make a difference in the final taste.

    • @derrickfoster644
      @derrickfoster644 Před 3 lety +11

      While I am sure pre-boiling will work any time I have rendered any fat I generally let it solidify twice. First time in a relatively tall receptical then turning out the fat and removing the non fat leftovers before remelting the fat into the final container or mold. Just what works for me.

    • @broutefoin
      @broutefoin Před 3 lety +8

      @@derrickfoster644 yeah, that will get you better results overall (can even repeat the process once or twice), let the fat cool, discard the water and scrape the gunk off, repeat. It's how you can get your tallow to be whiter in general if your using it for care products too.

  • @richardlorance6934
    @richardlorance6934 Před 2 lety +315

    I remember the Pemmican My Maternal Grandmother made when I was a kid (Now I'm 75). There were tons of Wild Chokecherries, Wild Plums and Wild Gooseberries in the breaks around the family farms in Cheyenne County Kansas and Yuma County Colorado. Wild Chokecherries are very sour when eaten directly off the bush. However they are great as an ingredient in things like Pemmican, Jelly and Pancake Syrup. Hard to find in todays supermarkets.

    • @hypnotherapycw
      @hypnotherapycw Před 2 lety

      choke cherries grow WILD ALL over the plains like CRAZY. i have them ALL over my property. they were NOT considered to be a WEED until the last 2-3 years... now called ARONIA and considered a SUPER FOOD.
      the VANITY of WHITE PEOPLE to take a food that has been used in a SACRED way for over 50,000 years by Natives and call it something new.

    • @bcallahan3806
      @bcallahan3806 Před 2 lety +16

      As a child choke cherries were quite abundant often at the edge of alder swamps. Oh yes quite sour and gave you that dry pucker. Taking mouthfuls to see who could keep a straight face the longest then spitting the pits at each other.
      Hard to believe that something that sour and puckery made the best jam or jelly I've ever eaten.
      Rose hip jelly was my second favorite. Sadly most have been wiped out. Blight, caterpillar and people
      They were all wild then never even heard them being available in a store. But you're recount reminded me of just how much better homemade jams, jellies or preserves are.
      Summers were about harvesting wild foods as well the garden.
      Wild choke cherries, rose hips(late summer or fall) blueberries, raspberries and blackberries.
      nothing like it.
      Wild berries are night and day superior to domesticated berries.
      Especially blue berries. Smaller and harder to harvest but worth the effort. Same with blackberries.
      Tear you to shreds if not careful or wearing inappropriate clothing.
      Nature's dress code, hard to argue with that.😉.
      Thank you, enjoyed your comment.👍👍

    • @kingmasterlord
      @kingmasterlord Před rokem +3

      @@bcallahan3806 you should try pepper jelly

    • @dangeary2134
      @dangeary2134 Před rokem +7

      I’m in the Midwest, so I wonder if using Mulberries, blackberries, and raspberries wouldn’t work. They grow wild all over the place here.
      I remember taking the kids to a local park once when the berries were in season.
      Fixed a meal, then sent them into the brush at the edge of a field to get their fill of berries!

    • @louisliu5638
      @louisliu5638 Před rokem +1

      @@dangeary2134 the only thing you have to check closely is if your Parks Depts. sprays the berries on roadsides to knock the vines back. We don't do that in Canada but in Wa. Statre I got really sick once harvesting salmon berries along the road Right-of-Way. County had lathered on pretty nasty chemicals.

  • @flyingfrogofdeath9616
    @flyingfrogofdeath9616 Před rokem +2

    This has helped many a colony stranded on a harsh Rimworld

  • @dianaday1
    @dianaday1 Před rokem +3

    Wow, really great presentation on Pemmican. I watch a lot of food prep channels, and this video is like the gold standard. The exact right amount of information and the exact right length. Informative but not too wordy. Great camera work and great pacing. Wish everyone in food prep copied your style!

  • @AnAZPatriot
    @AnAZPatriot Před 3 lety +751

    As a small child living amongst the Eskimos, you'd be amazed at how great whipped seal oil mixed with blueberry and a little sugar tastes. We called it Eskimo icecream, and that packs some calories!

    • @miguelangelcifuentescruz689
      @miguelangelcifuentescruz689 Před 2 lety +11

      How did they mix in the blueberry? was it crushed? did they freeze the whole thing?

    • @eddievest4096
      @eddievest4096 Před 2 lety +24

      They soak it in urine for 3 day. The acid balances out the excess fat.

    • @AnAZPatriot
      @AnAZPatriot Před 2 lety +116

      @@miguelangelcifuentescruz689 the blueberries were added intact, but of course some of them break making what would otherwise be a white desert into a purplish one. And the whole thing is kept at near frozen temp. Pure fat won't freeze up until it gets well below freezing, so it was very thick...like ice cream.
      @Eddie...grow up.

    • @SuperReznative
      @SuperReznative Před 2 lety +54

      @@AnAZPatriot Thanks for info.. and, as for, @Eddie... grow up. 🙏🙏🇨🇦❤️

    • @sarahs7253
      @sarahs7253 Před 2 lety +75

      @@eddievest4096 Eddie... grow up

  • @Mwarrior1991
    @Mwarrior1991 Před 3 lety +1959

    How to make food as a survivalist:
    "First we're going to need a full modern kitchen and butcher's tools..."

    • @signusthewizard9847
      @signusthewizard9847 Před 3 lety +102

      To be fair you can do all of this in a survival situation just not with the stuff he used.

    • @firstnamelastname5596
      @firstnamelastname5596 Před 3 lety +71

      All of the steps he used butcher equipment for can be done by hand, it’s just a pain to cut up the meat and smoke it without the proper tools

    • @1whowasNEVERhere
      @1whowasNEVERhere Před 3 lety +31

      My exact thoughts. Let me go get my dehydrator I keep at the kitchen store...

    • @zarblitz
      @zarblitz Před 3 lety +97

      Absolutely everything he did is doable by hand. As evidenced by the fact that people made pemmican long before any of these machines existed. It boils down to: dry and pulverize meat. Dry and pulverize fruit. Mix with rendered fat.

    • @Mwarrior1991
      @Mwarrior1991 Před 3 lety +41

      yea, im aware its doable by hand. i clicked on this video hoping to learn how to do that, then stopped watching a couple minutes in to go learn how to make this without buying all that equipment.

  • @bloom151
    @bloom151 Před 9 měsíci +1

    awesome job with this video! Very informative and detailed. Thanks

  • @gettomcgiver
    @gettomcgiver Před 2 lety +4

    I suggest using freeze dried fruit instead of dehydrated makes it lighter and easier to powder tastes amazing.

  • @brad4908
    @brad4908 Před 3 lety +113

    Growing up in Manitoba, the version we had was just dried/powdered moose, bear fat, and blueberries. There were certainly no apricots, haha.

    • @kathrynlysakowski1312
      @kathrynlysakowski1312 Před 2 lety +1

      Can you use freeze dried fruit?

    • @karynwith-a-y6686
      @karynwith-a-y6686 Před 2 lety +2

      Apricots make it bougie, but I would think you could improvise with just about any dried fruit. Those trad berries ( saskatoons, blueberries) all still delish. Really want to try this.

    • @sortathesame8701
      @sortathesame8701 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kathrynlysakowski1312 Make sure you start with the correct amount of fruit before you freeze dry it, so you know what your proportions are. You might have to add a bit more tallow to hydrate the fruit since it will be more even dry than dehydrated fruit.

  • @iterrilee
    @iterrilee Před 3 lety +265

    I have been making pemmican on a regular basis for years now --my bunch prefer it without the fruit. But, I mix in onion powder, pepper and garlic powder. Ends up tasting more like jerky.

    • @hecate235
      @hecate235 Před 3 lety +45

      Ah, but if you're using it for survival food, it's good to have the carbs and sugars from the fruit, too.

    • @JollywoodJoel
      @JollywoodJoel Před 3 lety +29

      @@hecate235 not to mention the vitamins and nutrients

    • @avatar1867
      @avatar1867 Před 3 lety +18

      @@JollywoodJoel
      Use liver meat then?
      Liver is plentiful today.
      Super nutritious.
      So are sardines. But they are very fatty.
      Hmm. 🤔

    • @sterkriger2572
      @sterkriger2572 Před 3 lety +16

      @@avatar1867 entrails are not that easy to dry and preserve. Fish is even worse since it requires a ton of salt. In a survival situation the last thing you want is to consume a large amount of salt.

    • @avatar1867
      @avatar1867 Před 3 lety +9

      @@sterkriger2572 hmm.
      Salt wise. I dunno.
      Long as you have plenty of water salt is very good.
      However yes I agree with the fish part.
      Liver would be hard to dry and preserve as well. In survival situations.
      In not survival situations, liver isnt too hard to dry.
      I would mix a % liver in with meat. Just to enrich your food brick.
      =p
      Just some ideas.

  • @theviewer7262
    @theviewer7262 Před rokem +2

    Wow just wow. Excellent man, packed with info and I'm so glad you made this.

  • @JOE-xz4kx
    @JOE-xz4kx Před rokem +5

    "IT'S PEOPLE!"

  • @SkyNinja759
    @SkyNinja759 Před 3 lety +203

    The perfect food and perfect music to start a organ harvesting colony to.

    • @JollywoodJoel
      @JollywoodJoel Před 3 lety +16

      took me a second to realize you weren't being some edge lord lol

    • @gamedudepc
      @gamedudepc Před 3 lety +5

      Hey Hey people

    • @vLavour1
      @vLavour1 Před 3 lety +6

      @@gamedudepc Sseth here

    • @echoambiance4470
      @echoambiance4470 Před 3 lety +12

      Out of all videos, I did not expect this one to contain a comment that would make me want to play some Rimworld.

    • @zacharyrollick6169
      @zacharyrollick6169 Před 3 lety +6

      @@echoambiance4470 I love brainwashing teenagers and turning them into cyborg killers in power armor.

  • @magnus_cockstrong
    @magnus_cockstrong Před 3 lety +37

    I've stored this information in my brain for any future apocalypse situations.

    • @sibit1
      @sibit1 Před 2 lety

      why when you cant just steal and kill for your food.

    • @GatileoGatilei
      @GatileoGatilei Před 2 lety +2

      @@sibit1 and what happens when there's no body left to kill nor steal?

    • @sadiea4381
      @sadiea4381 Před 2 lety +2

      Have you started yet?

    • @RussJAlan
      @RussJAlan Před 2 lety

      You better make some before the apocalyse

  • @cnl93blue
    @cnl93blue Před rokem +1

    Love the smoker! I have had a number 1 for about 20 years and have not had a single problem with it!! I only wish there were bigger ones when I bought mine!!

  • @shanejohns7901
    @shanejohns7901 Před rokem +4

    It seems to me that if you were really wanting to get rid of as much moisture as possible, you'd re-run those pulverized materials (both the meat and fruit powder) through the dehydrator in their pulverized form. By being pulverized, the trapped moisture that was too deep to come out in the first dehydration run will have a much easier time being removed.

    • @tearsarain47
      @tearsarain47 Před 9 měsíci +1

      I was thinking that too. I'm wondering if the tailor get rancid after howlong

  • @briandunivent
    @briandunivent Před 3 lety +367

    Of corse he’s going to love his own pemmican he just spent 18 hours making🤣. But I think you did a great job, and even if it tasted gross I’ll tell you what, in a survival situation, you-would-not-be-complaining, much love!

    • @dragnridr05
      @dragnridr05 Před 3 lety +16

      Not everyone loves their own cooking. But when you actually make something that does work and taste good, of course you would be proud. I have many and tried to cook many things that were just HORRID. Comes from experiencing fails and wins.

    • @finn8518
      @finn8518 Před 3 lety +6

      honestly i couldn’t imagine this tasting bad, even though everyone is saying it does. It looks like it tastes amazing lol

    • @williamwagonfield9603
      @williamwagonfield9603 Před 3 lety

      People will starve to death even with full shelves if they dislike the food psychology of food is also important

    • @dragnridr05
      @dragnridr05 Před 3 lety +2

      @@williamwagonfield9603 If there is food on the shelves, people will NOT starve. They know to either eat or die, they will choose to eat. Put a can of dog food in front of two starving people and they will either eat or die. It's really simple. But my original point is that a chef should NEVER be happy with what they fixed since they should always try and make something better. I can't bring myself to enjoy my own recipes since I am the one usually cooking them, despite it if others love it or not. I am always asking for ways to improve or make it better.

    • @Omenowl
      @Omenowl Před 3 lety +1

      @@dragnridr05 lots of people starved because they are disgusted by what is edible. Insects, worms, eyeballs, etc. even the vikings in Greenland starved because the didn’t eat same foods as the Inuit.

  • @1st67mustang390
    @1st67mustang390 Před 3 lety +248

    For those wanting a palatable version of pemmican, this version is the most palatable version I've seen, the addition of smoke and salt both add flavor and an extra layer of preservation ive not seen in other recipes. The extra fruit sorta counters it...but so far this is the recipe I'll be going with until I find better....so far this is dam near perfect recipe

    • @JoshuaSims1981
      @JoshuaSims1981 Před 3 lety +58

      Chili flakes would probably work. I'd probably add a little chili oil directly to the tallow and let it go into solution during the melting phase if you wanted that flavor, but that's just me.
      I'm going to throw a bunch of food science at you, so if you're not interested, now would be the time to tune me out.
      There's actually a reason why all these are the ingredients that are listed.
      Horseradish won't keep once ground like that and dried. The isothiocyanates (the compounds that give horseradish its flavor) are highly unstable. They won't last long at all. Ditto garlic. Allicin (compound that causes the pungency of garlic) is similarly unstable and breaks down quickly. Soy sauce and Worcestershire sauce have too much water.
      The whole idea of pemmican is that it has an extremely low water activity and held stably so low by the tallow.
      The real reason you're using hard tallow like that is because it's a saturated fat, rather than unsaturated fats. Unsaturated fats will go auto-oxidize (go rancid), but saturated fats don't. If you look at the structure of an unsaturated fat, it has double bonds between some of the carbons, which allows oxygen to infiltrate. It'll start forming aldehydes and smell like rot. Bad eats.
      What you COULD add to this, particularly if you're looking for flavor, would be rosemary. Rosavins and Salidrosides (actives in the rosemary) aren't super stable, but have an added benefit of being antioxidants and will help further preserve the product.
      Salt wasn't added in the original recipes simply because it wasn't readily available. It's a great add, though. Also helps keep any spoilage down too.

    • @WestSyde303
      @WestSyde303 Před 3 lety +10

      @@JoshuaSims1981 you are awesome

    • @Andrea.1tree
      @Andrea.1tree Před 3 lety +11

      @@JoshuaSims1981 Thank you for the breakdown. I’ve always known about the Native American method, and that only certain ingredients were used for an extended shelf life. I never took the time to learn why lol. Did you know that fruits weren’t often used, and bear grease was , when available?

    • @mrspeigle1
      @mrspeigle1 Před 3 lety +9

      @@JoshuaSims1981 damn I just feel like I watched an Alton Brown skit off of Good Eats, Well done good sir.

    • @robtrujillo8859
      @robtrujillo8859 Před 3 lety +1

      How would adding honey do for this recipe?

  • @normanbenjamin9739
    @normanbenjamin9739 Před 9 dny

    Thank you for making this video ! It is so helpful , we need to know these Survival Skills !

  • @JCDadalus
    @JCDadalus Před 6 měsíci +1

    Beautiful work!

  • @theradioactiveplayer3461
    @theradioactiveplayer3461 Před 3 lety +125

    Okay but offer this at a dinner mixed evenly with really dense brownies and watch people's faces of utter confusion

    • @OoavastoO
      @OoavastoO Před 3 lety +6

      @@cavedmanjim249 +1 for the hard tack idea! That would probably be pretty good. 👍 Add a few tots of grog on the side for full authenticity.
      From a sailor from 🇨🇦

    • @patchmoulton5438
      @patchmoulton5438 Před 3 lety +2

      @@cavedmanjim249 I remember hearing something about using pemmican as a sort of spread for hardtack. That and letting the weevils chew on it for a bit

    • @conitorres9774
      @conitorres9774 Před 2 lety +1

      😆🤣

    • @davidbutler1825
      @davidbutler1825 Před 2 lety

      I would love to put chocolate frosting on the top and enjoy the reactions as they bit in!

  • @chriswhatley9080
    @chriswhatley9080 Před 3 lety +159

    I worked with a guy with a massive handlebar mustache who had a subscription to a mule magazine in ND. His wife would send him food and snacks from Montana and one of the things was these little jerky like strips of bilberry pemmican. I still have dreams about how good they were. They used bear fat and it had whole dried berries in it which added some sweet spots. Shit was delicious

    • @Alsatiagent
      @Alsatiagent Před 3 lety +7

      First Nation peoples of Canada often used bear fat for pemmican.

    • @terryboyer1342
      @terryboyer1342 Před 3 lety

      @@Alsatiagent You mean Eskimos?

    • @Alsatiagent
      @Alsatiagent Před 3 lety +4

      @@terryboyer1342The Inuit are the Northern people of Canada. Little need for pemmican up there. I was thinking of the Mohawk in Ontario and Quebec.

    • @terryboyer1342
      @terryboyer1342 Před 3 lety +8

      @@Alsatiagent I watched a documentary a few years ago about Northern Canada. One of the hosts asked some natives what they wanted to be called? First Nation, Inuit etc. They all laughed and said "We're Eskimos!" That settled it for me as to who they are and want to be called. I heard in a different show a "native" man explaining that Inuit is an English made word. There was no Inuit people and they never ever called themselves that or even heard the word until recently. He said Eskimo in his native language means snow shoe maker and he and his family made snow shoes so he was an Eskimo. I imagine this info will cause the PC crowd to scream and run for their safe spaces.

    • @Alsatiagent
      @Alsatiagent Před 3 lety +2

      @@terryboyer1342 If you were educated you would know just where your bs story falls apart you sad low-status little man. You reveal more than you intend.

  • @AphitethLordOfLight
    @AphitethLordOfLight Před rokem

    I had fun watching and learning. Thank you for sharing.

  • @krodkrod8132
    @krodkrod8132 Před rokem

    I make something like pemican but without the meat and tallow. I use chick peas and garbanzo beans and lentils, cooked dried, and powdered. That's the base material. What holds it all together is, fruit leather. Made from Sea berries, black and red raspberries, honey berries, and what ever else i have growing in my food forest. Its a nutrient packed bar that tastes awesome. I make them in 1000 calorie bars so its easy to see the amount of calories you're getting. (No I'm not a vegetarian.) This is just the stuff I'm currently growing so I make a sustainable food out of it. If things get too crazy, I'll get some chickens.

  • @ryanmcewen415
    @ryanmcewen415 Před 3 lety +25

    I've made Pemmican a few times.
    A cube of Pemmican added to a brick of ramen makes a great healthier and cheaper lunch.
    Great camping food too if you hike.
    I like Blueberries and cranberries in mine. But I'll have to try the apricots and bananas.

    • @amberkat8147
      @amberkat8147 Před 2 lety +3

      Cranberries sound amazing. I'd go with that.

    • @ryanmcewen415
      @ryanmcewen415 Před 2 lety

      @@amberkat8147 they are super nutritious. And flavourful. Hard to go wrong

    • @katiejon17
      @katiejon17 Před 2 lety +1

      That sounds like a great idea. Do you use a special ramen, or just the cheap packs and chuck the salt-pack?

  • @LunchThyme
    @LunchThyme Před 2 lety +139

    "Ingredient 1: Beef Fat"
    "Ingredient 2: Lean beef, fat trimmed off"
    I'm reminded of baking recipes:
    "Ingredient 1: Unsalted butter"
    "Ingredient 2: Salt"

    • @Hannah-zc8gn
      @Hannah-zc8gn Před 2 lety +30

      Tallow and beef fat are not synonymous. Rendered fat has a very different shelf life whereas if you include beef fat in the recipe, it will spoil. It's the same difference between butter and ghee. It also changes the nutrition and flavor slightly.

    • @angel_izer8134
      @angel_izer8134 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Hannah-zc8gn whats the difference between butter and ghee though?

    • @brendanlitton9950
      @brendanlitton9950 Před 2 lety +15

      @@angel_izer8134 Ghee is clarified butter; that is, dairy fat with the milk solids removed. The analogy above is a good one; when you take your suet and render it for tallow, you will get little crispy dried bits (that are quite tasty with a little salt as a snack, although many just discard ....) that aren't pure fat, so making tallow is 'clarifying' your fat.

    • @felixvlack9818
      @felixvlack9818 Před 2 lety +8

      @@brendanlitton9950 Its also water that is being lost in the rendering process as well as the dehydrating process for the meat right? Maybe im wrong but as far as i know one of the reasons that beef goes bad without preservatives is that the water in the meat and fat is a breeding ground for bacteria which lead to the meat going bad.

    • @hypnotherapycw
      @hypnotherapycw Před 2 lety

      some people are SUCH idiots. i just.... (did you vote for trump?... asking for a friend)

  • @flyty2134
    @flyty2134 Před rokem

    First video that I found on the subject thank you so much for making it I will now try it myself God bless you and yours.

  • @gcruishank9663
    @gcruishank9663 Před rokem

    Great tutorial, going to make a huge batch of this for emergency/hiking food.

  • @CR-wk2re
    @CR-wk2re Před 2 lety +218

    I was today years old when I learned about pemmican and I'm so excited about it! I have a lot of food intolerances, so it's hard to find survival food that I can safely eat. This fits the bill! Thank you for the tutorial!

    • @rashoietolan3047
      @rashoietolan3047 Před 2 lety +4

      Will still be used centuries from when you read these words

    • @Big_John_C
      @Big_John_C Před 2 lety +1

      Don't be so sure, the high fat content can easily cause stomach discomfort and diarrhea in most people not used to that diet.

    • @LazyOtaku
      @LazyOtaku Před 2 lety +6

      Now play Rimworld, pemmican challenge

    • @SamG-py7ej
      @SamG-py7ej Před 2 lety +1

      Looks like a good ketogenic food

    • @starstreamir3817
      @starstreamir3817 Před rokem +5

      @@Big_John_C It takes a couple of weeks usually for most people to adapt. If you can hang in there and endure the discomfort (and even slight nausea in some cases), it passes. In my experience, after my system got accustomed to the carnivore diet, I noticed my eyesight improve very quickly, and muscle tone and energy increased very noticeably at about the 4th week. The only thing to be wary of is after being on this sort of diet, food sensitivity is ridiculous. I can't eat many of the things I used to love, like ice cream and cheesecake, or anything processed or most carbohydrates. Even a bite or two of something as seemingly harmless as a ham sandwich or biscuits and gravy make me feel awful for anywhere from 3 to 5 days. I love food in general and I sometimes miss all the things I used to enjoy, but the energy and that feeling of well-being that hits right at about a month of staying dedicated to this dietary regimen is really indescribable. There's no one size fits all kind of diet, and I can't guarantee it'll be the same for everyone, but for me it has been amazing, and so far everyone else that I know that has tried some close variation of this way of eating, and who were able to endure the uncomfortable transition period), have also seen amazing results, (like reversing diabetes in one case). Mainstream medicine has some things right, but they are also wrong about many things. Be super careful and do your due diligence before embarking on anything as seemingly extreme as this. There seems to be some genetic component that is way above my paygrade that determines which foods are best for any given person.

  • @JackShen
    @JackShen Před 3 lety +30

    salt for iodine is helpful too, keeps ya from getting goiter. I'd always consider salt a necessary resource. Without enough of it we can't conduct the electric signals for our very needed organs.
    That's how marathon runners "drown" while running a race, too much water.

    • @rockjockchick
      @rockjockchick Před 2 lety +5

      Most salt nowdays is not iodized any more. Make sure you read labels.

    • @GrifoStelle
      @GrifoStelle Před 2 lety +1

      @@rockjockchick ? Most
      I live in a land locked state with no salt water. If you want 'fancy' non iodized salt you have to reach for the very top or very bottom shelves XD

    • @AndreLuis-gw5ox
      @AndreLuis-gw5ox Před 2 lety

      @@GrifoStelle I live in a country with literally thousands of km of coasts and I dont think I have ever saw non iodized salt. That guy is tripping

    • @bobbygetsbanned6049
      @bobbygetsbanned6049 Před 2 lety

      @@AndreLuis-gw5ox Sea salt and table salt and kosher salt are all non iodized. Iodized salt is nowhere near as popular as it used to be because people have realized it tastes terrible.

  • @durwinpocha2488
    @durwinpocha2488 Před 2 lety +2

    A friend found a pemmican ball placed on a stick. Buried deep under ground along the North Saskatchewan River, just the carved end of the stick stuck out. Judging by the age of the stick, it must have been there for sixty years or more. Just the outer layer was no good, but inside it looked still good. The friend took it to a museum.

  • @jegr3398
    @jegr3398 Před 3 lety +93

    I made pemmican when I hiked a section of the PCT a few years ago. It is by weight, the most calorie dense food you can carry. It really gives you good energy too. I think it's cool that such an ancient food recipe beats out all the fancy hiking bars and other expensive modern hiking food you would buy and trendy outdoor stores like REI

    • @Daiceto
      @Daiceto Před 2 lety +1

      "It is by weight, the most calorie dense food you can carry." ... well.. if you dont give a shit about taste, you go with pure fat.. THAT has the most amount of calories .. if you wanna taste something .. peanut butter.

    • @marshingo5262
      @marshingo5262 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Daiceto well, pemmican probably beats straight fat out in all the other nutrients it has lol

    • @Daiceto
      @Daiceto Před 2 lety +2

      @@marshingo5262 sure.. but nutrients =/= calories so that doesnt matter for my comment.

    • @kellyyoung5298
      @kellyyoung5298 Před 2 lety

      I'm SOBO hiking the AT starting in July. How long does pemmican last during the summer months and does it stay in the block form?

    • @unknownalias5538
      @unknownalias5538 Před 2 lety +1

      I carry cake frosting from the dollar store. I don't think anything is more efficient than a tub of complex carbs that can't go bad .

  • @casinodelonge
    @casinodelonge Před 3 lety +39

    I will say this. When I was a kid, we had harvest festival at school when we donated a tin of pineapple chunks or whatever to a local OAP home. When I started to grow food in my garden, I suddenly realized "hey, how do I keep this stuff over the winter?" Suddenly, you realise why harvest festival was a thing, it meant you ate until next year!

  • @Eujoung
    @Eujoung Před rokem +23

    The process is very similar to making Peanut Butter Fudge. It's a little more involved but when he was making it I thought "hes's making Meat Fudge!" 😆
    Thanks for the new knowledge!

    • @halcyonzenith4411
      @halcyonzenith4411 Před rokem +1

      After he's done making the meat fudge what do you suppose comes next?

    • @Eujoung
      @Eujoung Před rokem +1

      @@halcyonzenith4411 Butt Fudge 😆

  • @jillwhatley994
    @jillwhatley994 Před 2 lety

    Thank you SO MUCH for this video!❤️❤️❤️

  • @gracefulsledge2857
    @gracefulsledge2857 Před 3 lety +50

    Those people who say its dry and tasteless should try starving before they eat it. I bet it will be the best thing they ever had.

    • @jamescanjuggle
      @jamescanjuggle Před 3 lety +1

      @Offda 079 exactly what I was thinking, making it into a broth in the morning

    • @formdoggie5
      @formdoggie5 Před 3 lety +1

      @Offda 079 breaking up a cube in a beef bone broth seems the ideal way to go, maybe add some rice or noodles if handy.

    • @MrCliverandy
      @MrCliverandy Před 3 lety +1

      @@formdoggie5 . We actually have almost similar way of food preserving method we called meat floss which is almost like the meat powder only more fibrous. We also add chili, salt, spiced to it and keep it in floss form instead of solidified. Then when we want to eat,we just add it to rice, porridge, noodle, and even bread.
      And yeah, some of the spices we use are not just give flavour but also act as natural preservant agents.

    • @colleenpritchett6914
      @colleenpritchett6914 Před 5 dny

      Make hard tack to go with this. Combine both into a “soup”

  • @rexandersen852
    @rexandersen852 Před 3 lety +216

    Ancient native Americans were technologicaly quite advanced using all the dehydrators, ovens and stuff to make this.

    • @johnknight4360
      @johnknight4360 Před 3 lety +2

      Smoking would do the trick

    • @gix_d
      @gix_d Před 3 lety +22

      They were so technologically advanced they lost all their land in 50 years.

    • @TheNaturalnuke
      @TheNaturalnuke Před 3 lety +19

      @@gix_d to be fair, they did get ALL of the diseases before we came back to take all the land

    • @markhuisinga1698
      @markhuisinga1698 Před 3 lety +4

      If the humidity is below 50% with a breeze you can dehydrate anything. The issues are animals and insects. However dehydrating in the wintertime makes it very easy. Wintertime beef jerkey is my favorite just using my screen porch.

    • @qbeck11
      @qbeck11 Před 3 lety +2

      You didn't know that food processors are an old world invention?

  • @paradoxdea
    @paradoxdea Před 2 lety

    This is very informative. Thank you!!

  • @terrenceolivido741
    @terrenceolivido741 Před 2 lety

    this guy has made a superb video. it is an absolute joy to watch. it is condensed, superb exposition on this storable food. i also like him! i go on a lot of amateur video sites and they have information that u-tube bans. however, we all discover how specialized the art is of doing great videos. one thing that happens commonly is the "look at me!" sense many videos have. anyway, priceless information here presented as directly as possible. you do not need the equipment he uses, but -at the same time- you need to be very aware and observant to learn to succeed with your equipment. best to all

  • @gwarlow
    @gwarlow Před 2 lety +12

    This will be perfect for those times I am stuck behind more than 4 cars at a drive-thru and can’t wait an extra 5 minutes to get my burger. I can’t thank you enough for this timely video. Keep on survivin’!

  • @Kaeseman
    @Kaeseman Před 3 lety +166

    why is there a man intentively staring and talking to me without moving his mouth in the intro

    • @1967davethewave
      @1967davethewave Před 3 lety +4

      LOL, I thought the same thing!!!

    • @runescapeog4202
      @runescapeog4202 Před 3 lety +3

      take a shot every time he says Pemmican

    • @we1418
      @we1418 Před 3 lety +2

      Mind control

    • @myfrequencies1912
      @myfrequencies1912 Před 3 lety

      Prediction: Ventriloquism is going to be BIG in how-to videos on youtube in 2021.

    • @we1418
      @we1418 Před 3 lety

      @@myfrequencies1912 that will be a trip. My mom was just saying something similar

  • @thomasleebrown3136
    @thomasleebrown3136 Před rokem

    Thank You for the education.

  • @peterlee9691
    @peterlee9691 Před rokem

    It doesn't have to taste good, because when you are starving it'll magically taste like the best thing on earth.

  • @chardtomp
    @chardtomp Před 2 lety +68

    I've seen pemmican mentioned in various historical accounts and always wondered what exactly it was and how it was made. That was very interesting.

  • @deltoid4
    @deltoid4 Před 3 lety +150

    dont know why this was recomended to me by youtube, never heard of this food, but i like the video, and now i want some :)

  • @stealthblu84
    @stealthblu84 Před rokem

    Simply, thank you.

  • @texasbandera7320
    @texasbandera7320 Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much for the video it was awesome!

  • @gora876
    @gora876 Před 2 lety +3

    “Goes down really easy” says the man as he is choking on it.

  • @jonathanduplantis1403
    @jonathanduplantis1403 Před 3 lety +25

    For good camping trips when I was a kid my dad and I made pemmican, Jerky and hard tack. We'd dry fruits, bring nuts, cheese, and some more typical items like bacon and normal bread. We'd fish and find mint in the woods. Lots of apples, onions, garlic, carrots and potatoes.

    • @SI-ln6tc
      @SI-ln6tc Před 3 lety

      That sounds all some!🤗

  • @SindyJ37
    @SindyJ37 Před 2 lety

    Awesome video!!! Ty for the info

  • @auntoneyofuntease6704
    @auntoneyofuntease6704 Před 10 měsíci

    I'm Native American and went to a ceremony in Wyoming with Arapahoe people and they made pemmican, it was yummy. Buffalo dry meat is good too. They just cut it into thin slices, hang it, and let it dry in the sun. Doesn't even need seasonings, Native style Buffalo dry meat is the bomb.

  • @125discipline2
    @125discipline2 Před 3 lety +11

    5:09 the acoustic guitar.. this guy knew what he's doing..

  • @anthonyjh02
    @anthonyjh02 Před 3 lety +45

    its almost comedic that this is a sort of throw back to a lost era of food from back in the day, and the process to make it involves all these modern industrial grade equipment.

    • @timothylongmore7325
      @timothylongmore7325 Před 3 lety +7

      It doesn't. Modern tools make it easier is all. Indians would've used a blender if they had one. You can pound it with a rock. I saw an indian video doing just that. All you need is a pan to render the fat in and a stick and a rock.

    • @sibit1
      @sibit1 Před 2 lety +3

      we have been using tools for thousands of years why is him using modern tools make you so mad when you damn well know he could do it the way it use to be made.

  • @catalhuyuk7
    @catalhuyuk7 Před rokem +1

    Discovered your channel reading a prepper article about pemmican. So impressed. Even though I’m vegan I still believe these ancient traditions are worth knowing. I have an abundance of squirrels, groundhogs and raccoons on my property. I mean they eat my garden so I get nothing. In a survival situation I think they’re the better option.
    Subscribed.

  • @hicoteo
    @hicoteo Před 2 lety +1

    I live in the tropics so may try this with goat meat and tallow and add dried coconut. I'll have to smoke the meat with orange wood.

  • @darkelite94
    @darkelite94 Před 3 lety +13

    this'll make some perfect backpacking food, carry it in a backpack with some condensed or powdered broth, some dried herbs and you got a few days worth of good stew without all the weight. Great video.

  • @bdctrans70
    @bdctrans70 Před 4 lety +6

    We use the left over trimmings from hunting carcasses and when we butcher a beef. We make ours, we stay more on the dry side. We love breaking the cakes to form a stew or soup, or in an emergency, we grate it over polenta or rice. We too add salt, it also helps in preservation. But the natives would use wild celery and break it down and warm with the tallow to help it preserve the pemmican. I found when we made ours too moist, that the tallow would turn bad even after vacuum sealing.

    • @chiledoug
      @chiledoug Před 4 lety +1

      interesting that they used wild celery I have some powder that I made from home dried

    • @rockjockchick
      @rockjockchick Před 2 lety

      Celery has a high sodium content, so would have been a natural source of salt

  • @donnasegreto4838
    @donnasegreto4838 Před rokem

    I’m so grateful for this recipe 💫

  • @carolleota8922
    @carolleota8922 Před rokem

    Thank you for sharing.

  • @adreabrooks11
    @adreabrooks11 Před 3 lety +53

    This looks absolutely delicious!
    When I make pemmican, it tends to be as a long-term storage option. In that case, I would lose the bananas (the fruit is meant to increase acid levels, which helps preservation. I would also add more tallow - enough that there's a layer on the outside, sealing the meat within. This sort of pemmican is typically broken up in a stewpot, with some greens and maybe a thickening agent (cattail or acorn flour was traditionally popular in my area); it's an ingredient, rather than a stand-alone food.
    That said, this recipe looks like a great option for a camping trip, or some other situation where it only needs to keep for a few weeks before use - and that pecan & apple smoke? Glorious! Thanks for the ideas!

    • @samme1024
      @samme1024 Před 2 lety +3

      Purslane is also a great thickener.

  • @magicdaveable
    @magicdaveable Před 2 lety +80

    I have been making pemmican for 50+ years. My version is a little different than your's but similar ingredients. I hand chop everything with an Ulu in a wooden bowl before adding the tallow. I found that it has better mouth feel with a coarser chop rather than powdered meat and fruits. Dried apple works well too. I use apple and apricot finely hand chopped. I salt to taste before mixing with tallow.
    Cut into 1" cubes it really does make a very nutritious high energy "snack" while in the woods hunting. Still my preference for meat preservation is air dried sausages and salamis.

    • @dasgoat76
      @dasgoat76 Před 2 lety +3

      Air dried sausages AND what David?!?! You left us hanging bro!

    • @AHD2105
      @AHD2105 Před 2 lety +1

      The dried apricot and apple sound healthy.

    • @reybangayan2649
      @reybangayan2649 Před 2 lety +2

      What is your measured ratio of dried meat to dried fruit? Then how do you measure the amount of talow to add? Thank you in advance, Rey

    • @MA-mh1vs
      @MA-mh1vs Před 2 lety +2

      @@dasgoat76 I watched a video and the man in that video made air dried jerky. He took the marinated meat and placed it on those cheap white pleated central heat/air filters stacked about 4 or 5 on a box fan laid flat between 2 chairs with an empty one on top and a bungie cord to hold it all in place and just let the fan blow through the filters for a few days.

    • @Fincayra15
      @Fincayra15 Před rokem

      @@MA-mh1vs aren’t those made of glass fibers?

  • @AmbientWalking
    @AmbientWalking Před 10 měsíci

    I want to try making this one day! Thanks!

  • @Mark_E_Essiembre
    @Mark_E_Essiembre Před 6 měsíci

    Good job man. Thanks for the vid.

  • @daughsonperkins4342
    @daughsonperkins4342 Před 3 lety +76

    At least he has a table so no -4 mood modifier

    • @gmfreeman4211
      @gmfreeman4211 Před 3 lety +2

      Pretty sure it's a -3 ate without table.

    • @brute3339
      @brute3339 Před 3 lety +4

      Didn’t eat with a table and it was dark so now gonna go set off the anti grain warhead stockpile

    • @custodianvrael6471
      @custodianvrael6471 Před 3 lety +1

      This post was made by the Rimworl- I mean Human resources department

  • @wittsullivan8130
    @wittsullivan8130 Před 3 lety +7

    The fluffy meat powder reminds me a lot of shredded jerky they used to sell when I was a kid. The jerky came in a box like a plastic snuff box (like Skoal) so kids could pretend they were dipping Skoal by putting a pile of jerky powder in their lips.

  • @JayJay-sf2wn
    @JayJay-sf2wn Před 2 lety

    You are the best! Thank you!

  • @kinky_Z
    @kinky_Z Před 2 lety +1

    Pemmican (also Pemican in older sources) is a mixture of tallow, dried meat, and sometimes dried berries. A calorie-rich food, it can be used as a key component in prepared meals or eaten raw. Historically, it was an important part of indigenous cuisine in certain parts of North America and it is still prepared today. The word comes from the Cree word ᐱᒦᐦᑳᓐ (), which is derived from the word ᐱᒥᕀ (), "fat, grease". The Lakota (or Sioux) word is , originally meaning "grease derived from marrow bones", with the creating a noun, and referring to small pieces that adhere to something. It was invented by the Indigenous peoples of North America. wikipedia

  • @pookienumnums
    @pookienumnums Před 3 lety +14

    ''mmmmm, beef powder'' are words i never thought id say

  • @HermonElf
    @HermonElf Před rokem

    Excellent Video, good survival food. Thanks

  • @YouTubeAreCommunistScum

    Thanks! Good video! No blabbing! Well done!

  • @Minimeister317
    @Minimeister317 Před 3 lety +69

    As a european, I had no idea such a thing existed, but sounds quite interesting for sure.

    • @thefatecontrol
      @thefatecontrol Před 3 lety +2

      I know it was very common during the frontier times of the US usually made from buffalo. Not sure about when it was originally invented.

    • @drawincode1800
      @drawincode1800 Před 3 lety +6

      It's From The Middle East And It's Called Hashish

    • @timesthree5757
      @timesthree5757 Před 3 lety +9

      @@drawincode1800 so native Americans are middle east. Every culture came up with something similar. The fist recorded use was in east asia.

    • @Fl4dd3rm0uz
      @Fl4dd3rm0uz Před 3 lety +4

      You need to read and watch more Western then ;)

    • @taylorsnider5809
      @taylorsnider5809 Před 3 lety +2

      @@drawincode1800 lmfaooo nooo

  • @artrunningbear3599
    @artrunningbear3599 Před 3 lety +7

    My grandmother made this for us when we were going up into the mountains for a long time, she used elk, beef, deer and we got the honey and fat from all of this. Its funny how you made it .....cool

  • @DavidRodriguez-pz4cq
    @DavidRodriguez-pz4cq Před rokem

    I have never heard of this , but this is awesome thanks 😊

  • @glennhouse3553
    @glennhouse3553 Před rokem

    Thanks for sharing.

  • @TheyForcedMyHandLE
    @TheyForcedMyHandLE Před 3 lety +25

    That was the longest chew time to bite size ever. But, hey, "it goes down really really easy" he says. lol.

    • @ShiningDarknes
      @ShiningDarknes Před 3 lety +5

      well he was also eating it for a flavor test so you need to really move it all over your tongue to make sure you get it on all the taste bud zones.

    • @odomobo
      @odomobo Před 3 lety +1

      Keep in mind, that little piece was probably something like 200 calories

    • @Jsnipes98
      @Jsnipes98 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ShiningDarknes good point & tastebud zones are myth, you’ve been indoctrinated!

    • @ShiningDarknes
      @ShiningDarknes Před 3 lety +1

      @@Jsnipes98 ...I hope you are not serious

    • @Themurderin
      @Themurderin Před 3 lety +1

      @@ShiningDarknes It is true that tastebud zones are a myth. It was thought up back in 1901 and didn't even include all potential tastes like umami. It's now believed that you are able to taste any flavor on any part of your tongue. If you don't believe me, try doing so yourself.