I don't know why we still refer to broilers as Cornish cross,that couldn't be further from the truth. Calling a broiler a "Cornish x" to me is like calling any other chicken by its original breeding. The birds, company's like Cobb/Vantress or Hubbard have are as close to a Cornish as a Cornish is to an Asil. these company's have birds that are pure breed and pedigreed,they have pedigree names such as Hubbards male line the "M99 or the M77" they have a list of different females for different growth rates such as the "Hubbard classic,the Flex,JA57,redbro M,just to name a few. Cobb has its own special pedigreed lines also like the "Avian48, Cobb500 and 700,their colored "range" bird breeder is called the Cobb Sasso150, now all these birds are PURE breed and pedigreed birds NOT "Cornish crosses"!! when these birds are bred together the resulting offspring is the modern BROILER. these company's NEVER refer to their birds as Cornish cross in any descriptions. so lets all PLEASE refer to these birds as what they are and that is :BROILERS (or meat birds ). thought I would just get that off my chest.
http://www.mcmurrayhatchery.com/jumbo_cornish_x_rocks.html
http://www.cacklehatchery.com/cornishcrosspage.html
http://www.purelypoultry.com/cornish-cross-broilers-p-207.html
http://www.hoffmanhatchery.com/chicks.html
Well..you get the point. The companies that developed these birds may not refer to them as CX but the general public~and apparently, the hatcheries selling the chicks~ do out of pure expediency. I can't imagine trying to market these birds by "Hubbard classic, the Flex,JA57"...sounds like a car, for Pete's sake! It's big, it's a broiler, it's white and it comes from Cornish ancestry somewhere down that line that has been crossed with other strains or breeds...Cornish Cross seems to be the quickest way to describe it.
A broiler, on the other hand, is a compartment on the cook stove where you can make a mean steak if you are talented enough.
Why does it matter so much that it weighs upon your chest in this manner? It's for the same reason folks don't call their pedigreed pooches by their registered names...too darn long and complicated and much easier to call them in to dinner by shouting, "Here, Jake!!".
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