Pemmican Process and Recipe - Pursuit with Cliff (2024)

To see every aspect of making pemmican… the world’s wholest and most awesome backcountry and survival food, check out my video on the process:

Below is the actual recipe I used for the three types of pemmican I make for backcountry trips. This process is a bit odd to write down as a recipe, because all aspects of the process are done to taste. This is fairly easy to accomplish, even for a novice cook, because all mixing is done post-cooking and post- processing. What you are tasting is the actual finished product, as you mix. There are not additional steps that are going to concentrate or otherwise mess with the flavor.

Just make sure that, as you mix ingredients to taste, you go little-by-little. You can always add more salt, fruit, honey, or pepper. However, good luck trying to squeeze tallow out of dried meat if you add too much in the first place!

Ingredients

Original/Carnivore Base-

Powdered Dried Beef or Wild Game (Smoked with Hickory/Mesquite or Apple/Cherry – Depending on your taste)

*It is critical that all fat has been trimmed from the meat before drying/smoking and grinding into powder.

Beef of Bear Tallow

Salt

Dried Fruit Pemmican Additions-

Dried Cherries

Dried Blueberries

Honey

Spicy Pemmican Additions-

Crushed Red Pepper

Process

  1. Make meat and fruit powders through dehydration and smoking process. Dry all ingredients beyond what you would for direct consumption.
  2. Use a food processor to blend powders to a flour consistency.
  3. Render beef or bear fat (suet is preferred) – slowly heat trimmed fat until it turns to a clear liquid, strain off liquid. Let the liquid cool. This liquid is the rendered, shelf-stable fat to be used in the pemmican.
  4. Mix your dry powders and salt. Add salt at a rate of 1.5-1.9% of the total weight of your powders used. For the original recipe, your mix will only be meat/salt. For a dried fruit mix, start with 30% dried fruit and 70% meat powder. Increase sweetness to taste by increasing the fruit powder or by adding honey. For spicy dry mix, mix an original mix and then add crushed red pepper to taste. You can also add honey to the spicy mix to get the sweet/spicy thing going on.
  5. Heat up your tallow with a double boiler. Slowly add the melted tallow to your dry mix until the mixture can be formed with your hand. Go slow! At first the extreme dryness of the powders makes it seem like you will never develop any structure to the mix – then it quickly hits a saturation point. You want to use tallow just up until that point. If you go beyond, you will end up with extra greasy pemmican. The tallow will literally build up on the edges of the pemmican bars. This makes it hard to handle and less appetizing.
  6. Form the pemmican mix in baking dishes or casserole pans. My preference is 1/2″ to 3/4″ thickness.
  7. Let the pemmican cool at room temperature or in the fridge.
  8. Once solid, cut the pemmican into bars for packaging.

Pemmican Process and Recipe - Pursuit with Cliff (1)

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Pemmican Process and Recipe - Pursuit with Cliff (2024)

FAQs

What is the ratio for pemmican? ›

There are many subtle variations of pemmican recipes, each owing to what was available in those regions and seasons. However, in order for pemmican to be shelf stable it does require a one-to-one ratio of fat to meat by weight; although some recipes call for a two-to-one ratio of fat to meat for extra calories.

How do you make pemmican? ›

To make your own, choose high-quality ingredients, such as dried fish or meat, dried berries, and fat. Grind the protein and berries until they're powdery and then mix them with warm rendered fat to make a thick paste. You can spread the pemmican flat and cut it into strips or shape it into a log for easy slicing.

Can you use Crisco to make pemmican? ›

Do not substitute a soft fat such as lard, bear fat, duck, or goose fat, Crisco or butter. The denser and more saturated the fat, the better. Combine powdered meat and berries, pouring melted tallow until coated. The ratio is flexible, but I use roughly four parts meat, three parts berries, and two parts fat.

What cut of meat is best for pemmican? ›

Round is a good cut. Prepping: Remove all visible fat. To slice, use longest knife on partially frozen meat. Drying: Better taste if not cooked.

Should you add salt to pemmican? ›

Add salt at a rate of 1.5-1.9% of the total weight of your powders used. For the original recipe, your mix will only be meat/salt. For a dried fruit mix, start with 30% dried fruit and 70% meat powder. Increase sweetness to taste by increasing the fruit powder or by adding honey.

How much tallow to add to pemmican? ›

Melt the tallow in a double boiler and add to the powder mix. If you want your Pemmican a little dryer start by adding 3/4 of the fat and slowly add more till you are satisfied with the texture. Stir well till all the fat has been absorbed into the powders.

Why was pemmican banned? ›

The Red River Colony imposed on that economic order and, when famine threatened the settlement in mid-winter 1814, Governor Miles Macdonnell (1767-1828) issued what became known as the Pemmican Proclamation. This law was meant to stop the export of pemmican to NWC forts in the West and retain it for the HBC settlers.

How much pemmican do you need to survive? ›

40 day winter: 12800 pemmican. 50 day winter: 16000 pemmican. These are near-minimums, though, and you should shoot for higher. (I say near because a colonist can survive for five days without food.)

How long does homemade pemmican last? ›

At room temperature, pemmican can generally last from one to five years, but there are anecdotal stories of pemmican stored in cool cellars being safely consumed after a decade or more.

Can butter be used for pemmican? ›

You can spice it in different ways to get a variety of flavors. You can use different oils like lard (rendered fat), coconut oil, and even butter for short trips or cold weather trips.

Can you put spices in pemmican? ›

Pemmican consists of two fundamental ingredients — dried meat and tallow — and is used as a highly nutritious, on-the-go food staple. Spices can be and usually are added, while dried berries are sometimes a feature.

Can you vacuum seal pemmican? ›

Make sure to store your pemmican in a plastic bag in a cool dark place (bug-out-bag, box, backpack, etc.), you could also vacuum seal the pemmican but it is not necessary. To keep them from sticking together, wrap pemmican pieces in parchment paper.

Can bacon grease be used for pemmican? ›

Make Pemmican: Animal fat is the basis of this survival food that's been around for centuries. Combine bacon fat, lean dried meat, berries, and nuts and pound it into a paste. Flatten the mixture into patties and let it sit until it hardens.

What food is similar to pemmican? ›

Jerky, pemmican, hardtack, and parched corn are traditional travel rations that have passed the test of time. They are products that have been produced, relied on, and refined for centuries, even millennia. Just a touch of modern technology and convenience makes them even better today.

Is pemmican like jerky? ›

Pemmican is a dense mix of fat and protein that has been used as a survival staple for centuries. Jerky, on the other hand, offers a chewy, flavor-packed experience. It has evolved into a gourmet snack.

How much pemmican per person per day? ›

Pemmican (One Pound of pemmican per day) Go here to learn how to make your own. Pemmican is the best backpacking staple because there is nothing that can compare to nutrient density. Pemmican is power packed with healthy animal fats mixed with dried pulverized meats and berries.

What is a Native American ground mixture of fat and protein? ›

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.

Why does pemmican not go rancid? ›

Jerky, here defined as seasoned and dehydrated meat, is porous — when exposed to humidity, the dry jerky actually absorbs water vapor out of the air and begins to spoil. Pemmican, on the other hand, is not porous. The rendered fat in Pemmican seals the pores in the dry meat, so that humid air can't moisten the meat.

Can you survive only on pemmican? ›

Stir- ring in a few ounces of pemmican to some hot water can make a hot, nourishing and appetite-satisfying soup. You don't want to survive on pemmican alone. Strenuous backpacking will lead to daily glycogen depletion, best re- plenished with carbohydrates.

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