Cooking Young roosters

Upon slaughtering I let them rest in the fridge for 48-72 hours. If you put them directly in the freezer you will need to do the same once they are thawed before cooking. Weird, I know!

Since keeping chickens and slaughtering them, I can’t understand how “Granny used to tell little Johnny to go kill a bird for Sunday dinner.” Or that’s the way it’s portrayed on TV shows anyway. :confused:
If you get it in the pot before rigor sets you can cook it right away they say... I am slow and ended up trying to eat rubber bands :lau
 
I did a batch of 18 week olds recently and they were great. We did two on the fire pit grill. A little texture but nothing substantial despite not being low and slow. Definitely rest them for 1-2 days in the fridge before cooking. If it's not any of that then there's something else going on.

IMG_20200807_191152_696.jpg
 
I did a batch of 18 week olds recently and they were great. We did two on the fire pit grill. A little texture but nothing substantial despite not being low and slow. Definitely rest them for 1-2 days in the fridge before cooking. If it's not any of that then there's something else going on.

View attachment 2318600
Yummy! Even in the morning! 🤣
 
Since keeping chickens and slaughtering them, I can’t understand how “Granny used to tell little Johnny to go kill a bird for Sunday dinner.” Or that’s the way it’s portrayed on TV shows anyway. :confused:

Just call me Johnny. On the farm, Mom would tell me to bring her a chicken. I'd cut the head off, pluck it, and gut it, leaving the giblets in for her. She'd finish butchering and cook it immediately. Not a problem with rigor mortis at all.

This was one chicken, not several. There was no chilling or cooling. I buried the offal after she had the chicken, no delays. Neither of us were time challenged, we had a task to do and we did it.
 
Just call me Johnny. On the farm, Mom would tell me to bring her a chicken. I'd cut the head off, pluck it, and gut it, leaving the giblets in for her. She'd finish butchering and cook it immediately. Not a problem with rigor mortis at all.

This was one chicken, not several. There was no chilling or cooling. I buried the offal after she had the chicken, no delays. Neither of us were time challenged, we had a task to do and we did it.
The first year by the time I got them skinned rigor was setting in. LOL I was skinning like I was doing a furbearer. Way too slow even for pelts.
I have a plucker now
 
Just call me Johnny. On the farm, Mom would tell me to bring her a chicken. I'd cut the head off, pluck it, and gut it, leaving the giblets in for her. She'd finish butchering and cook it immediately. Not a problem with rigor mortis at all.

This was one chicken, not several. There was no chilling or cooling. I buried the offal after she had the chicken, no delays. Neither of us were time challenged, we had a task to do and we did it.
That’s what I figured had to have happened. It’s just I’m not that fast I suppose.
 
The first year by the time I got them skinned rigor was setting in. LOL I was skinning like I was doing a furbearer. Way too slow even for pelts.
I have a plucker now
I don’t do enough to invest in a plucker, unfortunately. But at the rate my new hatches are going I definitely need one. With my four broods this year my numbers are...wait for it...
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.
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14 to 4 — yeah, 14 cockerels to 4 pullets. I’ve got 3 that I have to butcher this weekend. And then 2 more in a couple of weeks. Then my last hatch of 7 chicks are just 3 weeks old (yep, the males are already evident) so I’ve got a bit of a break.
 
I don’t do enough to invest in a plucker, unfortunately. But at the rate my new hatches are going I definitely need one. With my four broods this year my numbers are...wait for it...
.
.
.
14 to 4 — yeah, 14 cockerels to 4 pullets. I’ve got 3 that I have to butcher this weekend. And then 2 more in a couple of weeks. Then my last hatch of 7 chicks are just 3 weeks old (yep, the males are already evident) so I’ve got a bit of a break.
I have 38 hatched this year oldest is 13wks, youngest 2 weeks... I think 32 are cockerels.. but that's good for me because I want freezer boys.
 
I have 38 hatched this year oldest is 13wks, youngest 2 weeks... I think 32 are cockerels.. but that's good for me because I want freezer boys.
Yes, I agree it’s good to have them in the freezer, but my poor arthritic hands just about give out when plucking, but I love that crispy grilled skin! :drool
 

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