I sold my red jake and slate jenny today. I lost my black tom overnight. I am assuming because of the cold...? No idea. Birds, you know. I have 2 black jennys left and going to try getting another jake this weekend. I decided to keep the blacks if the red and slate sold... Typical of my type of luck to have a vital part of the trio die.
I decided that I will be making a Porters order if I get the money in time. Only thing is, I want poults by April or May. I don't want to wait until June-August. So, I will have to decide if it's worth the wait. I do want to get Sweetgrass yet. I haven't decided if I want Silver Auburn, Self Buff or go back to the Reds.
Don't tell the chickens, but I like the turkeys more than them.
Oh, and my 3 BBBs are going to be processed on Monday. How long do I gave to leave them in the fridge to come back out of rigor and be tender? What's the best way to store them in the fridge? I put my ducks and geese in the fridge for 2 days and they started to dry out. Obviously I didn't have the cover sealed well enough, but I don't want that happening to my holiday dinner! I bought a 5gal bucket w/ a snap tight lid to store them in... I heard brining is a good idea. If so, how long should I brine? Can I over brine and make it salty? The BBW we bought fresh 2-3yrs ago wasn't this difficult, btw.
Hehe.. If I had got turkeys first, there would probably not be chickens here
Minimum 3 days to stand or longer. 5 days I worry, but I know many people go even longer.
I free ranged mine, and locked them up a few weeks before I processed. I brine, and let the first one stand three days.
he was 5 months, 16-17 lbs dressed, and no
fat. I raise our livestock lean to meet my parents nutritional needs.
I use 1 cup of sea salt, my seasonings and broth. warm it up to melt the salt down.
Add to the bucket and chill in the fridge. Add the bird, fill with cold water and close it.
The more often you swish the the bird in the brine the better, but once a day is fine.
Lift him out, lower, lift, lower... is the "swish".
I liked it but DH said the thigh was a bit stringy. So the next I brined 4 days, much better. That was about 2 weeks later.
I rinse the bird well after brining. I don't usually salt any of our foods and it wasn't overpowering, actually really good.
It is more involved,
yes but for me worth knowing how it is raised and treated.
Its a good feeling for me to know I prepared that healthy meal from a poult to the table, and it was treated with respect.