- Thread starter
- #11
Cody brown
In the Brooder
- Nov 18, 2020
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Thats so good, using as much meat as possible is good but an old hen feeding 5 kids. WowI hatch my dual purpose pullets and cockerels and eat both. My goals involve raising them to eat and to play with chicken genetics so I need to hatch a fair amount. I could probably sell my excess pullets but I just don't want to. It's easier for me to eat them. That way I don't have to hatch as many chicks or have the facilities to care for them.
I butcher my cockerels by 23 weeks. I usually keep the pullets until around 8 months of age, so i can see what eggs they lay before I decide which ones to keep. I rotate the older hens out on a three year rotation to keep the laying flock fresh. My "playing with genetics" goals require rotating girls and boys in and out too. So I also cook and eat my older chickens.
How old they are when you butcher them has a lot to do with how you cook them. There are many threads in this forum about that. When I was growing up on a farm Mom would tell me to bring her a chicken. I'd catch one and give her a plucked and gutted chicken. She's do the rest. She might fry a fairly young one but an old hen became chicken and dumplings. People that tell you that you can't cook old chickens just don't know how.
There is not much meat on a pullet or old hen, there just isn't. There are only two of us and I can still get two meals out of a pullet. I bake an 8-month-old pullet for one meal for Thursday, the second one is chicken soup with the leftover meat Saturday. The main difference between a pullet and cockerel for me is that I have leftover meat at lunch if it is a bigger cockerel. Mom could feed a family with five kids off of one small old hen. That's why she made chicken and dumplings, that stretches the meat. Soups and stews will stretch it too.

