Some of the cheapest meat off-cuts suitable for dogs include chicken backs, necks, and feet, as well as beef or pork trimmings and organ meats like liver and heart. These cuts are often more affordable than premium cuts and can provide essential nutrients for dogs. Always ensure that any meat fed to dogs is fresh and cooked appropriately to avoid health risks. Consulting with a veterinarian is also advisable before making significant changes to your dog's diet.
Your fuel relay is faulty
there was also a part where she tries to escape through the window but their are dogs outside barking at her, and then the window shuts and cuts her head off haha
No. Lamb is actually quite a fatty meat (around 10% fat, for cuts of lamb which do not have a huge amount of visible fat on them), whether it is ground or not. However you can fry the meat and then drain off the fat which comes out of it, to make it leaner.
It cuts off the engine while you start it up.
adjust your carb so it will keep the fuel up
CASCA
Canine teethe get their name from the charictoristics of an animals teeth taht are used for tearing and gripping food.
You can eat off rabbit meat.
hang game and skin as soon as practical.. (already gutted).. if you need to clean the carcass with water, do so, and then pat dry with clean towels..wrap carcass with cheese cloth or put in cheese cloth bag.. let hang at 34-38 degrees for 3-5 days for a deer, longer for bigger game.. this is "dry aging"...with this method, the carcass will have dried/crusty parts on the surface which need trimmed off and discarded while butchering cuts.. cuts can be packaged and frozen right away.. you could also, after towel drying the carcass, quarter the animal and wrap the quartered hunks of meat with cheese cloth and age in fridge and then just finish the cuts (taking quarters down to steaks and roast) and package and freeze.. this is "dry aging" and gives the meat the best flavor and most tender..the downfall of dry aging is the loss of meat from the surface due to dehydration and the time consumed...but...well worth it!! "wet aging" is cheapest/easiest... butcher down to cuts and place cuts, right away, into vacuum packed plastic with cuts in own juices.. leave in fridge 2-3 days and freeze.. in dry aging the natural enzymes in the meat start to break the tissue down, tenderizing it and dehydrating the meat some (concentrating flavor) in wet aging the cut has its own juices vacuumed into it making it juicier and more tender... dry is the way to go but wet works in a bind.
The reason ground meat must be cooked to a higher temperature than whole cuts of meat is because ground meat is because ground meat is handled more than whole cuts of meat. More handling means that there is more opportunity for bacteria to get into the meat.
Yes, unless someone manually tears them off or cuts them, but they will always grow back, and also we might see a dog in the future with no whiskers but we have not yet. Hope this helps!
Dam