Last July I was contacted by an old acquaintance that had raised this breed from hatching eggs and needed a refresher course on processing so I came over and we butchered out 3 Barb roosters. They were about 5 months old as I recall, and I had never seen or heard of the breed before so I was extremely interested in the learning experience.
First impression:
The adult chickens were BEAUTIFUL. Tall, dark black feathers and bright red combs and white lobes. Really good looking birds. She had 2 hens and I think 4 roosters in the enclosure. I expected a fight when we went to catch the roosters to "send them to camp" but they were very chill and laid back non-violent chickens (at that age, anyway.)
I was amazed how easy they were to handle and I got them into the cone without any trouble.
Since the plan was to roast the birds we plucked them and since low maintenance was the plan for the day we just dry plucked. The skin was pretty firm, and the feathering was loose. We had minimal skin tears and plucking was a piece of cake. The cavities were good sized but in the interest of time and the recipe we planned to test them on, I butterflied them (or "spatchcock") by cutting out the backbone. Kitchen shears were sufficient to get through the bones.
The carcass was big, but like most heritage type birds didn't have the muscle of a production bird, but for it's young age, it was not a poor showing. I would have cooked two of the Barbizeux to equal one production roaster. I think better muscle mass could be achieved if they were fed a specific meat bird diet on a planned meat bird schedule. These boys were fed an all flock mix because the group was being raised for longevity in a breeding program and not as "meat fast".
The meat was lean, and the flavor was incredible. Imagine a very "chickeny" heritage bird and then a smooth buttery quality.
Conclusion:
I want these for their beauty, temperament, meat and egg production. Looking for breeder near east texas for chicks and eggs in jan/feb!
