Processing Day Support Group ~ HELP us through the Emotions PLEASE!

Those turkeys are gorgeous! It does seem a turkey like that is in a league of it's own when it comes to dispatch and cleaning
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I only cook turkey two ways: roasted for the holidays and like ground meat in taco's, burgers, pasta sauce etc.
 

Killed my first turkeys a few days ago, 3 of my five beautiful 9 month old toms. I love their personalities and color, but I had just too many toms. I've killed many chickens in the past, but these were quite different. First, obviously, was the size. We used a modified 5 gallon bucket as a killing cone instead of the normal jug. It took two people to lift and secure each one into the bucket. Likewise, the amount of blood that drained after the neck was cut was much, much more than a chicken. We skinned the first bird, which took quite a while, but it allowed me to see the amount of fat on the breast of the bird. OMG. We had so much that we cut off the excess and gave it to the eagerly waiting cats. The other two we dry plucked, which was astonishingly easy. I always thought that scalding was necessary, but with a good pull, the feathers came out by the handfuls. They're in the refrigerator now. Any fresh turkey recipe suggestions? I've been researching online, most say that baking is one of the best ways. I do love a good fried turkey as well, but I don't think that these will fit in our fryer.

The two toms in the very back, as well as the royal palm (white/black) on the far right were the ones slaughtered.This picture preserves them at their prime. Thank you, beautiful boys, for providing me with meat. I kept the two foremost toms, as the were the best tempered and had the best coloring.
Holy turkey and breasts!!! AWESOME!! they all look so good and healthy too!
 
Thank you everyone for your kind words. I actually just passed another processing milestone, one that I never thought I would be able to do. If you've ever been read my signature or seen me on the Silkie thread, you know I strive to breed quality silkies as a 'hobby' flock (I don't breed to sell, and I haven't yet shown, I just enjoy good quality silkies more than almost any other type of chicken). However, most people who have bred birds of good quality know that the offspring don't always turn out great quality, you'll always have culls. Pullet culls are easy to place in homes, but cockerel culls, not so much. I had three in particular that I wanted gone, so I went ahead and bit the bullet and processed them myself. One was older and lacking all around in type, one was young and had split wings and an incorrect comb, and another young one had a poor crest and was missing his outside toenails (a side effect sometimes with too much foot feathering). It was much harder to kill them than my 'regular' chickens or my turkeys, as I am quite fond of these fluffy creatures. I did it just a little bit ago, while it was dark, to ease their stress. I plucked the first one, and skinned the other two. Skinning is a nightmare to start, as the feathers stick to the meat and makes it hard to see what you are doing, but takes less time than plucking. I expected the meat to be black, but holy moly not this odd. The skin, meat, bones, AND organs were black and smoky gray. The bones in particular were fascinating, jet black and shiny. And they weren't as skimpy as I'd thought they'd be, the older one (bottom) actually was quite a little chunk. The bare 'white' meat has a strange green tint, while the 'dark' meat really lives up to its name. The organs, especially the heart, gizzard, and testicles, were also black. Our house is becoming a regular butcher's! I still am bothered by the killing, but I take comfort in knowing that all the birds here had a fantastic life up to their end.


 
Thank you everyone for your kind words. I actually just passed another processing milestone, one that I never thought I would be able to do. If you've ever been read my signature or seen me on the Silkie thread, you know I strive to breed quality silkies as a 'hobby' flock (I don't breed to sell, and I haven't yet shown, I just enjoy good quality silkies more than almost any other type of chicken). However, most people who have bred birds of good quality know that the offspring don't always turn out great quality, you'll always have culls. Pullet culls are easy to place in homes, but cockerel culls, not so much. I had three in particular that I wanted gone, so I went ahead and bit the bullet and processed them myself. One was older and lacking all around in type, one was young and had split wings and an incorrect comb, and another young one had a poor crest and was missing his outside toenails (a side effect sometimes with too much foot feathering). It was much harder to kill them than my 'regular' chickens or my turkeys, as I am quite fond of these fluffy creatures. I did it just a little bit ago, while it was dark, to ease their stress. I plucked the first one, and skinned the other two. Skinning is a nightmare to start, as the feathers stick to the meat and makes it hard to see what you are doing, but takes less time than plucking. I expected the meat to be black, but holy moly not this odd. The skin, meat, bones, AND organs were black and smoky gray. The bones in particular were fascinating, jet black and shiny. And they weren't as skimpy as I'd thought they'd be, the older one (bottom) actually was quite a little chunk. The bare 'white' meat has a strange green tint, while the 'dark' meat really lives up to its name. The organs, especially the heart, gizzard, and testicles, were also black. Our house is becoming a regular butcher's! I still am bothered by the killing, but I take comfort in knowing that all the birds here had a fantastic life up to their end.


get out of town! taste?
 
get out of town! taste?
Haven't tried them yet, as I just got finished cleaning them less than an hour ago, but I'll surely let you know when I try them. To me, the meat kind of looks like dark frog legs haha. I just have to wrap my mind around the fact that this is chicken, not some sort of alien meat!
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In Asian markets black skinned chicken sells at a premium..... I don't know, it just looks WEIRD!
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This is nothing though, you should see the ones they sell in Asia (usually Ajam Cerami)... talk about black!

Probably tastes like chicken.
 
In Asian markets black skinned chicken sells at a premium..... I don't know, it just looks WEIRD!
lol.png
This is nothing though, you should see the ones they sell in Asia (usually Ajam Cerami)... talk about black!

Probably tastes like chicken.
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I knew you were on here!! lmao!!! I am such a ditz!!

 
Haven't tried them yet, as I just got finished cleaning them less than an hour ago, but I'll surely let you know when I try them. To me, the meat kind of looks like dark frog legs haha. I just have to wrap my mind around the fact that this is chicken, not some sort of alien meat!
th.gif

I've only slaughtered four birds, all Silkies, that were part of an order of straight-run hatchery chicks. I'm sure they taste like regular chicken, but I thought they were incredible. Since I have only eaten grocery store mush, the flavor of nearly 6-month old chicken was incredible.

I'll warn you that the meat has thin sheets of black through it. Anywhere the meat touches the bone, there will be a very thin black layer. The connective tissue will have a thin black layer to it.

I used my Silkies in curry--I wanted to disguise their meat, as you know Silkies are particularly sweet little birds--and the rich buttery flavor of the meat burst through the curry sauce. One Silkie made two nights of dinner for my husband any myself, and the carcass made a fabulous soup. The broth was particularly rich, maybe because they were older and I had only made soup with grocery store mush.

The meat will cook up and look like normal meat, but be a little darker than a normal chicken. There will be those thin dark sheets through the meat wherever it touches connective tissue or bones. The breast meat was quite normal looking, just not really bright white like store-bought mush.

I think Silkies carcasses sell for about $30 to $40 in Asian stores. I suspect they get their supply from pet people who don't have the courage to slaughter their cockerels they just love too much and instead try to find them a new home. Unfortunately, I think those new homes are in Asian pots, and who knows how they are treated before slaughter. I love my chickens, but if they are destined for a pot, it is going to be my pot.

I had never slaughtered any animal before these Silkies, so eating the first one was a challenge for me. You might not have the same issues about killing I do.
 
I've only slaughtered four birds, all Silkies, that were part of an order of straight-run hatchery chicks. I'm sure they taste like regular chicken, but I thought they were incredible. Since I have only eaten grocery store mush, the flavor of nearly 6-month old chicken was incredible.

I think Silkies carcasses sell for about $30 to $40 in Asian stores. I suspect they get their supply from pet people who don't have the courage to slaughter their cockerels they just love too much and instead try to find them a new home. Unfortunately, I think those new homes are in Asian pots, and who knows how they are treated before slaughter. I love my chickens, but if they are destined for a pot, it is going to be my pot.

I had never slaughtered any animal before these Silkies, so eating the first one was a challenge for me. You might not have the same issues about killing I do.
jajean.... we slaughtered our first 'silkie' on Saturday, he is actually a barnyard mix, mamma is a Silkie, daddy was one of our barnyard roosters who is not... but the cockerel looked just like his mamma. His skin and bones are black, we haven't cooked him yet, but I expect to find the dark streaks like you described since everything else was black except his organs were black streaked.

I totally agree with the line I bolded above... lf someone wants to buy a bird off of me as a flock rooster that is great, but I won't give away my roosters. If someone wants free meat they can look elsewhere. My roosters are worth at least $5 in meat, and I will do them myself if that is the case.
 

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