Yes. My husband and I don't eat big piles of meat any more. If I process two at a time, that is all the chicken either of us want to eat in a week. I make soup out of the spent carcass. The skin doesn't really go to waste. I bury the skin with feathers along with the entrails in the garden. People wonder how I grow such lush plants and fruit trees and shrubs. It's because I've been burying the end results of processed chickens for thirty years on the same property. We bury deep enough that when I put an apple tree or raspberry row over the same area in a years time, we don't dig into bones. But the earth is dark, rich, and full of earth worms.I can see the advantages of doing it this way Kassandra.
Especially if you hatch year round.
We tend to do one large processing day in the fall - mostly because they are all ready at about the same time from the spring hatchings. I'd really rather do one at a time, except when I want one I may not necessarily have one ready... not to mention having the skin is a habit. Plucking is a pain, but I suspect many people in a true self-sufficiency situation will not get enough fat in their diet. Utilizing all the animal is important to us... skin included.
I'm with Mumsy... we are kind of "over" the Cornish X thing. They simply are not self sustaining. I am loving my RIR for dual purpose... so anxious to try the first one this fall.
In a true self sustaining fashion, there is plenty of fat in the diet. We grow our own nut trees. I use drippings from bacon to cook with, and there is plenty of good fats in salmon and fish we get from the Puget Sound here. There is plenty of fat in dairy too. Too much fat in the diet with or without chicken skin added to the mix.