The Old Folks Home

Here is Jamie Oliver’s recipe for guinea fowl
Pot-Roasted Guinea Fowl with Sage, Celery and Blood Orange
This is a gorgeous recipe. The guinea fowl is cooked slowly in a pot, so it combines braising and roasting. The richness of the butter, used to baste the birds, with sage and garlic, works superbly with the guinea fowl. The fresh and fragrant flavors of the orange, thyme and celery, used to stuff the guinea fowl, steam in the cavity, infusing their flavor into the breast meat.

Ingredients
two 2 - 2 1/2 pound guinea fowl
8 blood oranges
1 whole stalk of celery
1 small handful fresh thyme
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 tablespoon olive oil
6 cloves of garlic, whole and unpeeled
6 tablespoons butter
10 sage leaves
1 1/2 cups fruity dry white wine
Directions
Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F.

Remove any excess fat from the cavity of each guinea fowl. Wash thoroughly inside and out and pat dry with paper towels. Rub the cavity with a little salt. Cut off the two ends of the oranges, stand them on end and carefully slice off the skin (once you have removed one piece of skin you can see where the flesh meets the skin). Slice the oranges into five or six rounds each. Remove the tougher outside ribs of the celery until you reach the white, dense bulb and slice across thinly.

Put in a bowl, mix in the thyme and a small pinch of salt and pepper, then stuff the cavity of each guinea fowl with this filling. Pull the skin at the front of each guinea fowl's cavity forward, to cover the filling, and tightly tie/truss up.

Heat a thick-bottomed pan and add the olive oil and the guinea fowl, the skin of which has been rubbed in sea salt and pepper. Cook until lightly golden on all sides, then add the garlic, butter and sage and cook for 3-4 minutes until golden brown. Add the wine at intervals, enough to keep the pan slightly moist at all times. Place in the oven for 45 minutes, checking every 10-15 minutes and just topping up the wine as necessary. The guinea fowl will be roasted and partially steamed.

When cooked, carefully remove from the oven and place upside down on a dish, allowing all the juices and moisture to relax back into the breast meat for at least 5 minutes. While your meat is resting, make the gravy.

Gravy
Remove all the fat from the roasting pan and place the pan on gentle heat. In the bottom of the pan will be your cooked, soft, sweet, whole garlic cloves and some gorgeous sticky stuff--when this gets hot, scoop out the stuffing from the guinea fowl cavity and add to the pan with about 2/3 cup of wine. As the wine boils and steams, scrape all the goodness with a spoon from the bottom of the pan into the liquor. When it has all dissolved, leave to simmer gently. Squash the cooked garlic out of their skins with a spoon (discard the skins); this will also thicken the gravy slightly, as well as give it flavor. Pour any of the juices that have drained out of the rested birds into the pan with the gravy, simmer and season to taste. Serve the guinea fowl with roast potatoes and any simply cooked green vegetable--spinach, kale, bok choy or broccoli
 
Suddenly dead chickens is scary. It usually is not something that will kill the entire flock, unless there are symptoms.

I have had this happen with hens--liver rupture. Roosters are less likely to have that problem. 

Here in California I would send him in for a free Necropsy to see what happened.

Things to check on:

Do not feed rooster layer feed. Some of them will have Kidney damage from it and die suddenly.
Make sure they are not getting into rat poison or eating rats killed with rat poison. There is a new poison based on vitamin k depletion combined witha vit D overdose that has a worse secondary kill than other types of rat poison.

:hugs Sorry for your loss!


Ron, how do you feed the roosters and hens different feed. I have wondered that and since you brought it up? In my flock and it appears in most flocks the roosters and hens live together.
 
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I'm looking forward to reducing the number of roosters, or at least moving them further away!!

Yummy looking recipe-- what is red birds' eye chillies? What would be a resonable substitutuion?

Is that coconut vinegar??

Love garlic and love ginger.
coconut vinegar is available from Asian stores. It has a "mother" like ACV. you can substitute rice vinegar if you have to.

birds eye chili

birds-eye_chillies_16x9.jpg


they are very hot. perhaps habanero hot. you could use very fine jalapeno

original adobo does not have the chili or coco milk. this recipe is my fave though
 
Ron, how do you feed the roosters and hens different feed. I have wondered that and since you brought it up? In my flock and it appears in most flocks the roosters and hens live together.

The flock gets a grower or flock raiser ration. Free choice oyster shell is provided. The hens will get the calcium they need from the free choice method.

Most feed has a very small difference in ingredients between layer and starter\grower.
 
The flock gets a grower or flock raiser ration. Free choice oyster shell is provided. The hens will get the calcium they need from the free choice method.

Most feed has a very small difference in ingredients between layer and starter\grower.


Do the roosters not eat the free choice oyster shells. I knew the layer pellets had more calcium. I had a couple of soft shelled eggs so I put out free choice oyster shells.
 
I buy 5 gallons of tubah - coconut sap fermented alcohol for 6 bucks and let it convert to vinegar for 3 months

In a diaper pail??
lau.gif




Quote: My girls get layer with 3.25% Ca but when free ranging so much in the summer the egg shells were soft and broke often-- started dumping smashed egg shells to their range area and when that was not enough added oytster shell to mix into their pellets. . . . .
 
In a diaper pail??
lau.gif




My girls get layer with 3.25% Ca but when free ranging so much in the summer the egg shells were soft and broke often-- started dumping smashed egg shells to their range area and when that was not enough added oytster shell to mix into their pellets. . . . .


iTS A 10 gallon cooking oil drum repurposed.

but a diaper pail woild work just fine.

Mrs Oz just relocated back from the Manila area to the island where out beach house is. She bought 6 55g and 4 20g blue drums with clamp on lids to pack the family's belongings in to load in the container. I get to repurpose them into feed storage drums.
wee.gif
 

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