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- #21
Today I did it in the barn because there was thunderstorms outside starting very early morning. Unfortunately I couldn't take picturesDo you pluck or process in the house?
Please take some pics of your plucker at work.
because I had my hands full and was all by myself this time. I will be doing some more on Monday and or Tuesday of next week. I find that doing 5 or 6 at a time works better for me when I'm by myself because I can do all the killing and hang them to bleed out. Then start with the first one and pluck them all. Then once they are all plucked I cut them up so they fit in my freezer better and then do all the clean up as I go. All I have left right now is to dump the feathers and inedibles into the compost pile and I am done for the day. Total time was 2 and a 1/2 hours from start to freezer. Total meat weight minus the inedlibles carcasses and necks was 20.8 pounds.(I kept the legs, thighs, wings, and deboned breasts for us to eat) I should have gotten a weight once they were plucked before but honestly with the thunder and lighting I was just trying to get done lol.
Can honestly tell you the plucker worked well but had to stop and reposition it after starting the first bird because it was set up backwards and the plucker would fall out of the drill when it was plucking because the chuck would loosen while plucking. It should be turned around the other way next time or set on reverse when plucking.
The knife I got which was a havalon piranta edge worked AMAZING. I can't say enough about it. The blade is razor sharp and it comes with 12 extra blades. I agree with what others have said the best thing to use for the actual killing is a razor type knife this one is like the long razor blades you can get at the hardware store but this knife has a more stable blade and I didn't have any fears that it would break or not do the job. I can also vouch for the fact that you don't feel it when you are cut by a knife so sharp. I didn't realize that I had cut myself cutting up the first chicken until I was totally done and only then because I was bleeding. (It wasn't a bad cut but enough to make me bleed). It didn't hurt at all after it was done.
Another thing I have noticed doing both the cutting the head off (which I have done in the past) and bleeding the birds out which I did this time, was that the birds I did with bleeding out did not get rigor mortis. Not sure if it was the fact that I separated them the night before so I didn't have to chase them or if it was the difference in killing method, or a combination of both, but they were flexible and pliable the whole time processing where the ones we had cut the heads off without bleeding out first were all stiff when it came time to cut them up for the freezer.
I would still love a tub plucker at some point and time because 15 seconds versus 2 or 3 minutes seems so much better lol. I love saving time.