• giveaway ENDS SOON! Cutest Baby Fowl Photo Contest: Win a Brinsea Maxi 24 EX Connect CLICK HERE!

Letting Meat Rest

I rest mine for a day or so before the freezer. It depends on what I've got going on.

Why not try eating a fresh one, resting a few and right to the freezer with others? You have enough and if you mark it on the packaging, you can see if there is a difference.

I have always read that you MUST rest the bird. I also watch a lot of cooking shows and many that are filmed in other countries. I always find it interesting that in other countries, a bird is butchered and goes right in the pot. Makes you wonder.
That is how my 82 year old father-in-law's mother did it.....but she could kill, pluck, gut, cut up, breaded and have it in a hot iron skillet in 30-45 minutes. If you get in the pot less than an hour after slaughter, then rigor mortis will not have had time to set in, which is what toughens the meat.
 
My grandma used to butcher one for Sunday dinner every Sunday years ago and it got stuffed and went right into the oven. I was very young then.

I notice they taste a little "wild" if you eat them the day of butchering so I let them sit in the freezer for a week before I start eating.

Most backyard breeders wouldn't have enough refrigerator space to let them rest for two days at a cold enough temperature to avoid spoilage. I butcher 20/year. I have 4 freezers and even dividing them up 5/freezer they take a day to freeze solid so maybe they are "resting" a day before the freezing is complete. I raise my White Rocks to about 4 pounds at 17 weeks and they are tougher than a cage raised commercial bird because they are older and get to use their muscles. I can still make them on the grill but I have to grill them slow for about 45 minutes, longer than store chicken.

The rigor mortis theory makes sense. I will have to try "resting" a couple this year. Around here I have never heard of anybody "resting" their birds, they all go right into the freezer.

If you have a local meat processor that smokes try taking some in to be smoked. Around here it is expensive, a little over a $1/pound but they are delicious.
 
Last edited:
I let mine rest in a cooler with ice for at least 2-3 day and have let them rest up to eight days. I also add a little salt which is great at drawing out any blood that might be left in. My 85 year old mom says that the salt makes them a little more tender. You will be surprised at the amout of blood that it draws out. Yes I remember back in the day when a chicken would be killed and at the same day. Good stuff!
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom