Are Heritage breeds edible?

Miami Leghorn

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Hello guys and gals. I've been wondering about this for a bit now and since it's the holiday season I figured I would ask it. I know many breeds of birds and other animals bred for consumption have evolved from generation to generation some have changed some have not. I understand that a large group of farm animals are bred for show. Having said that, for example in the case of Heritage Breed chickens and Turkeys. Are they edible? Has the taste been bred out of them because they are now being shown for looks and confirmation? Are they useless for the dinner table?
Have they gone the way of the elegant and Majestic Peafowl?

I'm curious.
 
Heritage birds in theory would be the ones that are the same as they have been in the past. Though I'm sure different breeding purposes have somewhat changed them. Some breeds lean more towards meat than others. In chickens a heritage breed know as dual purpose such Barred Plymouth Rock or Delaware will have more meat than a breed know for eggs such as Leghorn, but all are very much edible. Some would say only birds under a year, but we have eaten older birds with out changing the cooking method. I don't think that has changed. The bigger change is in the hatchery creations of production breeds where the focus is on egg laying, but these birds are edible as well. The CornishX may be the bird with the biggest difference in meat compared to chickens of the past. Sorry I'm not very familiar with ornamental breeds,. but I would guess them to be edible, but very little meat per bird.
 
Hello guys and gals. I've been wondering about this for a bit now and since it's the holiday season I figured I would ask it. I know many breeds of birds and other animals bred for consumption have evolved from generation to generation some have changed some have not. I understand that a large group of farm animals are bred for show. Having said that, for example in the case of Heritage Breed chickens and Turkeys. Are they edible? Has the taste been bred out of them because they are now being shown for looks and confirmation? Are they useless for the dinner table?
Have they gone the way of the elegant and Majestic Peafowl?

I'm curious.
:pop
 
Heritage Breed chickens and Turkeys. Are they edible? Has the taste been bred out of them because they are now being shown for looks and confirmation? Are they useless for the dinner table?
They're very edible.. they take longer to grow to a harvest-able size than "commercial" or "broiler" breeds.

They're great for the dinner table with quite a bit more flavor AND texture than any super market bird of recent past.. because of the slow growth.

It takes some adjustment.. if you're used to those mushy tasteless birds from market. Some might describe it a more "gamey" and/or tough/stringy.. Once you've adjusted though, it's not a bad thing, or any of those.

Be sure and give enough time for rigor to pass.. and depending on age.. intend to cook in a slow, low, and moist environment. Not *usually* on the grill or at high heat preparations like frying, unless harvested before 14 ish weeks for chickens. (Brining still good at times.)

The cost to produce heritage birds.. is likely double or more.. I can't put a chicken on the table for under $15-20 feed plus my housing and time/effort including butchering. Turkeys, ultimately ended up being too heavy for me to works with.. (late 40's F, with arthritic type hands/shoulder injuries).. but oh yes, they are delicious.

We also use them to make ground chicken or turkey.. seasoned up and used in any recipe as desired!

So.. very, very useful.. not very affordable.. but if you care about where your food comes from or how it's treated in the process.. priceless!

Are peafowl really tasteless now or just too dang expensive, making them more valuable to sell than put on the table, taking into account their breeding cycles and all??

My understanding of what "heritage" birds means.. is ones that are capable of reproducing (mating and setting) without human intervention like artificial insemination or incubation.

Though I don't personally consider all the sexlinked crosses of "heritage" breeds which are perfectly capable of reproducing as "heritage" birds per say.. I guess that's where the term heritage may come in.. as in history of a specific breed that breeds true ie the whole plymouth rock etc.. new heritage breeds are being created all the time, lol.. partly if it's all the way back to their origin.. most of us are not keeping red or green jungle fowl.

Anyways just conversation, I agree.. they're all edible.. even bantams, egg breeds, etc. Some are more "worth" it to grow.. none is worth it if you don't enjoy them (breed or species).. for me anyways.. YMMV.

One other quick note on keeping "heritage" breeds.. many (chickens) will start to experience mating behaviors/antics before harvest that meaties really won't.. It's worth it to me to keep a "stag pen" for grow outs that will be harvested and not left to carry their genetic information forward.
 
I have not eaten any birds that I raise(not yet at least), but I have read that a heritage breed that was developed in the 1800s(or something similar, I read it a while ago so I don’t know for sure) and is still the same today. Plymouth Rocks and Jersey Giants are examples of Heritage breeds. I am currently raising Jersey Giants and they are quite enjoyable. I have read that heritage breeds are edible, and that people recommend to cook them in low heat, high moisture conditions for a longer period of time and that they have more flavor and texture as was mentioned above. Turkeys I have no idea about, but I also have a single heritage mottled black tom.
 

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