A word about the meat qualities of this bird...
I'm the cook and "hatchet man" so to speak for cgmccary so I'm the hands on assessment of how these birds finished out at the 28-32 week window. Chris wanted to really give these these birds full opportunity to develop and doing so waited until after the 6 month mark to be sure they'd had their chance to recommend themselves for some destiny other than the deep freeze. Having more experience with the heavier Buckeye, I tell you truthfully- I didn't hold out much expectation for what looked to be a scrawny bird.
I couldn't have been more wrong.
These birds dressed out a beautiful carcass with lovely full, rounded breasts, white skin and an American standard 60/40 ratio on white portions to dark. Finished dress weight was a modest 3-3 1/2lbs, but as it has been said throughout the thread, the breed currently suffers from lack of size. What amazed me was the amount of
fat that was on the carcass. To watch these birds at the feeders, you'd NEVER believe they'd have an ounce to spare anywhere but lo' and behold they have a goodly amount of nice dense yellow fat evenly distributed but with especially large deposits in the abdominal cavity (which I saved and then inserted under the skin over the breast portions- voila`! instant basting).
As soon as the birds had been dressed and allowed to relax a good 24 hours in the fridge, I roasted one off. A la` Julia Child, I used the French method of tons of butter and salt on the outside and a screaming hot oven- started back up 15 min, right side up and basted 15 min, left side up and basted 15 min, then breast side up, basted 15 min and out of the oven to rest 15 min. What'd it taste like you ask? The flavor was
EXCELLENT with white portions very sweet and dark portions hearty without being the least bit greasy. I wasn't prepared for the texture of the meat- when they say "fine grained" what that translates into is the muscle fibers are much smaller so the meat is much more dense and to the tooth has texture more consistent what I've experienced in game fowl being 'meatier' in texture. I think the dark portions are exceptionally appropriate for confit. The skin isn't much to write home about- flavorful and tough, but then again, who expects thin and crispy skin on a 6 month old bird?
Mind you, this assessment is done using the commercial Cornish/RockX for a baseline. Being an American raised in the city, commercially produced chicken was all I knew and so all my comparisons are made from my experience. I've begun to expand that experience in cooking with and eating other heritage birds including Java, Buckeye, Game and (of course) La Fleche.
Joseph, you need to send me a Dorking to expand the education of my palette
.