tender?

rigagirl

Songster
11 Years
Dec 28, 2008
251
1
129
churchville ny
I know i have read about this before and i am not sure if i am in right area.
I have RIR i have butchered before and tried baking one and it had good taste but was tough. Someone on here said it was because i cooked it with dry heat. I thought they made some sense so i cooked next one in a crock pot and that was still just as tough as first one. I even let chicken rest in fridge up to 48 hrs as suggested on here. A lady at work says she boils for hrs before they are Tender. My husband was talking to a lady today who is an old farmer and said she never heard of chickens being tough like that and suggested it was maybe my cooking. I have one hen and rooster in my freezer waiting to be cooked but i am scared. Any suggestions or tips.
 
Try using a cooking bag when you bake it. I usually use that to keep it from drying out and getting tough.
 
the first 2 might have been 6 months old. in my freezer is a rooster at least 1yr old. i know he wasn't 1.5 yrs. other is a rooster maybe 5 months old.
 
i do want to try coq au vin but am worried that it wont come out good.. how about in a slow cooker with tomatoes and vegetable stock?
 
The barred rocks that I had growing up were always tough and stringy. We were told it was because they were free-range and too much excercise made them tough. I don't know if that has anything to do with it or not.
 
For Layers: Boil them for sure...I boil mine for an hour or more and then pull all the meat off the bones. Then I put all the meat with a few leg bones back into the pot along with a dash of chicken broth, and two cubes of buillon, some salt, and some pepper. Then I add celery, carrots, and onions, then egg noodles and have chicken noodle soup! Especially when it's cold like this.
 

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