You can do it yourself! When taking the birds to the area of dispatch, I always give them the "destiny" talk.... makes me feel better, anyway.
I have found that disposable scalpels are indespensible. It usually takes one per bird, but the throat slitting is quick and nonsaw-y and the scalpel really makes the taking off of the legs and removal of the oil gland on the tail and making openings for removal of organs a breeze. Keep the feet on to the very last as they are great for dunking into hot and cold water.
When cutting the throat, pick a patch that doesn't take you over feathers. After the flapping and bleed-out is over, have a near boiling pot of water and a pot of cold water handy, perhaps out on the lawn. Dunk in the very hot water, swirl, remove and dunk in the cold water. Then out on the lawn is spread some newspapers. Take the head and feathers off there as they wrap up for nice tidy disposal.
The rest I do in the kitchen sink....scrubbed with Comet to sanitize beforehand. Makes it easy for splatter cleanup and any rinsing.
Once the head is off and/or the feathers are off, most all chickens look the same. After one or two birds, harvesting is no big deal... especially once you taste real fresh chicken!
(p.s.: before cooking, wait for rigor mortis to set in and set out. Cooking a stiff bird will equal VERY chewy meat)
I have found that disposable scalpels are indespensible. It usually takes one per bird, but the throat slitting is quick and nonsaw-y and the scalpel really makes the taking off of the legs and removal of the oil gland on the tail and making openings for removal of organs a breeze. Keep the feet on to the very last as they are great for dunking into hot and cold water.
When cutting the throat, pick a patch that doesn't take you over feathers. After the flapping and bleed-out is over, have a near boiling pot of water and a pot of cold water handy, perhaps out on the lawn. Dunk in the very hot water, swirl, remove and dunk in the cold water. Then out on the lawn is spread some newspapers. Take the head and feathers off there as they wrap up for nice tidy disposal.
The rest I do in the kitchen sink....scrubbed with Comet to sanitize beforehand. Makes it easy for splatter cleanup and any rinsing.
Once the head is off and/or the feathers are off, most all chickens look the same. After one or two birds, harvesting is no big deal... especially once you taste real fresh chicken!
(p.s.: before cooking, wait for rigor mortis to set in and set out. Cooking a stiff bird will equal VERY chewy meat)