Quote:
Try this mantra...."OHMMMMMM The crock pot is my friend OHMMMMMM" "OHMMMMMM The crock pot is my friend OHMMMMMM" "OHMMMMMM The crock pot is my friend OHMMMMMM" "OHMMMMMM The crock pot is my friend OHMMMMMM" "OHMMMMMM The crock pot is my friend OHMMMMMM"
Here's my complicated recipe for a tender bird from a tough old bird:
Age the tough old bird in the fridge at least 2 or 3 days, a week is better. Before going to bed one night, put the tough old bird in the crock pot. Season it. Add about 2 cups of water in the crock pot, put the lid on. Plug it in. Set it on low. Go to bed. (Gee, that's rough, so far.)
In the morning, if the bird still isn't tender, check the liquid level. You probably won't need to add anything, but if there's less than about 4 or 5 inches of liquid, add a bit. Put the lid back on. Go on about your day, check back in a few hours. When it's done, the meat will fall off the bones, and be tasty and delicious.
That's it. It really doesn't get much easier.
If you do this, there's no reason
any age chicken should
ever turn out to be like rubber bands.
That's all there is to it. No muss, no fuss, you just have to wait a long time. In hot weather, I sometimes set up a table outside and run an extension cord out to it. Make sure children, pets, or livestock won't knock it over.
If you don't have a crock pot, they are very cheap at thrift stores and yard sales, make sure you get the kind with a removable crock, the others are a PITA to clean. I put a heavier lid on mine than it came with, to hold the heat better.
Because the time it will take to become tender is not definite, I usually plan some other meal, and cook the chicken up on the side, to use the meat the next day in something else. That way nobody's hovering around the kitchen bugging you about when it'll be done.
Hope this helps, and you enjoy your chicken!
That is the way any food should be cooked (well, maybe not for a day, but you get the idea.).
It actually takes me dang near a hour to make a can of Dinty Moore Beef Stew! When it is just heated for warmth, a regular can will fill 2 bowls. When I have it cooked down till every bite is tender and moist I could almost use a second can
(not that my waist would show that or anything
)