Info Overload - Question on Caponizing and Roos

Awesome! Thanks for the information. I'll try this with our next batch. In reading online I also noticed deer fat can be rendered as well, for soap, candles, leather treatment et cetera...among others. This will be a really good project to show the kids how to render fats and what can be done with them afterwards.

I think I'll try my first batch of schmaltz with eggs. Plus one of my iron skillets is due a re-seasoning, so I'll use this for that as well.
Don't waste that good schmaltz on seasoning your skillet.
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Okay, we butchered 6 last night at 12 weeks old; I removed the skin, fat, entrails, legs and wing tips, and I cut out the back (goes to the stock-pot bags in the freezer)...and our skinless, backless semi-free-range reds dressed out between 2.25 - 2.75 pounds. I thought that was half decent. We still have 2 red broilers left, both of which I THINK are pullets. I am going to wait until they start to lay because Melinda wants a few eggs from them crossed with our RIR rooster for when we do our next hatch. That makes it hard to plan the hatch since it will be a while till they lay, if they lay...but it'll be fine since we aren't filling chick orders...just trying to keep a steady supply of replacers coming...

Are your red broilers Red Rangers? That is what I had. Four of my pullets ended up getting to the lay stage, and gave me some good sized eggs, even a couple of double-yolkers. They were big fat fatties because they were the ones with all of that pretty abdominal fat that I made schmaltz out of. I fed mine layer pellets once they started laying, but they got a good bit of scratch which helped them make all of that fat. Out of 4 pullets, I got 1 1/2 pounds of abdominal fat, and nearly 2 pints of schmaltz.

:Your two broiler pullets might be good choices to let get to 28-30 weeks before butchering to get all of that good fat. The carcasses of mine were good to roast at that age.
 
Hah! okay, no wasting schmaltz on the iron then...this will be fun.

I practiced rendering with some deer tallow two days ago but got it just a little too hot, or maybe let it go too long, or had troo much "meat" in it...it ended up with a "bacon" smell. That'd be fine if it were a fat I would use for cooking certain foods, but I'd rather get it to come out clean so I can use it for whatever I want without any cooked smells lingering. The tallow would have gone into a test batch of goat-milk soap; instead it got mixed with "goodies" for the chickens (I only did 4 ounces). I'll reduce the heat and time when I do the schmaltz.

The broilers are the "red broiler" from Ideal Poultry, so not 100% sure what lines they use compared to "Red Ranger" broilers. One of the pullets looks just like a RIR, only with that big head and large feet; she's already the size of my year-old layers. The other is the same size but somewhat of a golden color with a mix on the tail feathers. I almost considered that she was a cockeral, but the other boys had already started getting some very obvious saddle and hackle feathers, and the tail featherss had started to change. I had planned to let them go a few more weeks but wasn't comfortable with how fast they were maturing...already starting to fight each other et cetera. I am very impressed with how active they all were/are in the field...great foragers!
 

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