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Shabbat Shalom my friends. 

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Very beautiful chickens!So how many chickens do you guys have and what breeds?
I have 10 chickens currently. 1 F1 Easter Egger hen, 2 Black Ameraucana hens, a Frizzle Bantam hen, an American Gamefowl hen, a mixed breed Bantam hen, a Silkie x Red Sex Link pullet, a Silkie x Easter Egger pullet, & 2 Black Breasted Red Araucana pullets. View attachment 1809327View attachment 1809328 View attachment 1809326View attachment 1809325 View attachment 1809324View attachment 1809322View attachment 1809331 View attachment 1809323View attachment 1809329 View attachment 1809330
Those are the most beautiful Aruacanas I've ever seen!@Hybridchucks my chickens are doing great thank God! I got 2 Araucana pullets.View attachment 1826687View attachment 1826688View attachment 1826690View attachment 1826692
Why thank you!Those are the most beautiful Aruacanas I've ever seen!![]()
Thank you for the invite, Aryeh! I would love to join this thread! I can even say Shabbat Shalom and you'll understand what I'm saying, unlike other places where nobody knows what I'm talking about! Thank you!
I can slaughter a chicken just like a shochet (Jewish butcher), but since I am not a shochet (Jewish butcher) the meat is considered not kosher. From my understanding shechitah (kosher slaughtering of animals) is the severing of the jugular and carotid artery by an extremely sharp knife in one swift movement, causing immediate unconsciousness to the animal and rendering it unable to feel pain. The slaughtering is only part of the shechitah process. After the animal has bled out, in the case of a chicken, the feathers are removed, the bird is gutted, and then salted to draw out any remaining blood. @Akrnaf2 has a better understanding of the shechitah process than I do.My questions:
Is it proper for anyone to learn and use these methods to butcher a chicken?
If a mistake is made, what must be done with the meat?
Please excuse me if my questions are clumsy. I know that belief systems are touchy. I am fascinated and curious. I ask these questions with respect.
The requirements in mammals is to cut with an EXTREMELY smooth and extremely SHARP the tracea and the esophagus ( it will certainly will end with cutting the carotid arteries cousing Severe bleeding and Central nerv system colps ) in poultry the requirements is to cut one, but usually the two are.I can slaughter a chicken just like a shochet (Jewish butcher), but since I am not a shochet (Jewish butcher) the meat is considered not kosher. From my understanding shechitah (kosher slaughtering of animals) is the severing of the jugular and carotid artery by an extremely sharp knife in one swift movement, causing immediate unconsciousness to the animal and rendering it unable to feel pain. The slaughtering is only part of the shechitah processes. After the animal has bleed out, in the case of a chicken the feathers are removed, the bird is gutted, and then salted to draw out any remaining blood. @Akrnaf2 has a better understanding of the shechitah process than I do.
If a mistake is made when shechting (slaughtering an animal for kosher consumption) an animal then the meat is rendered treif (not kosher) in such a case the meat would probably be sold to a non Jew.
Is the gid ha’neshe a problem in poultry?The requirements in mammals is to cut with an EXTREMELY smooth and extremely SHARP the tracea and the esophagus ( it will certainly will end with cutting the carotid arteries cousing Severe bleeding and Central nerv system colps ) in poultry the requirements is to cut one, but usually the two are.
After the animal killed, it must pass a very strict check בדיקה to see that it doesn't have any internal problems, after that it have to pass take out some organs and tissues like the suit חלב (not milk! ) and a sinew from the back legs -gid ha' neshe גיד הנשה and if you want to cook the meat it should pass another process called h'acshara הכשרה with salting and rinssing are an important part of it the sentence "cosher salt" come from it.
If you want grill the meat you don't have to do hacshara because the extremely hot fire is taking out the blood resdius from the meat, this is the explanations don't know if it is the reality.
Told you that Jewish dietary laws are extremely complicated.....![]()