Who skins their birds?

I skin anything that's going to be ground for burger meat or sausage. Otherwise it's a blasphemy to take off the best part. Crispy skin... yum.

I've said it before- I'm trying to figure out a way to cross a Cornish Cross chicken with a Shar Pei dog to end up breeding a meaty chicken with extra skin.
I plan on shredding and canning these, so no skin needed!
 
I've skinned them before, just pull the skin and cut around the feet etc and it slides right off
That has been my experience too. I have a hard time believing that it is faster or more convenient to pluck a chicken. I think the biggest drawback to skinning a chicken is the meat quality. I ordered 18 meat chickens a few years ago and skinned all of them. I prefer store bought meat ten times out of ten than to the meat that is produced from a skinned chicken. I just make my own meat to keep the skill alive just in case one day I have to rely on my ability to clean my own chickens. If you have a system for plucking chickens that works good I see no advantage to skinning the chicken. I just skin them instead of plucking them because I am lazy. I thinking skinning is very easy. The easiest bird I ever cleaned was a quail and that is some delicious meat but you have to raise a lot of quail to have enough meat. I need about 6 quails to satisfy me for one meal. A chicken can give me food for several days.
 
That has been my experience too. I have a hard time believing that it is faster or more convenient to pluck a chicken. I think the biggest drawback to skinning a chicken is the meat quality. I ordered 18 meat chickens a few years ago and skinned all of them. I prefer store bought meat ten times out of ten than to the meat that is produced from a skinned chicken. I just make my own meat to keep the skill alive just in case one day I have to rely on my ability to clean my own chickens. If you have a system for plucking chickens that works good I see no advantage to skinning the chicken. I just skin them instead of plucking them because I am lazy. I thinking skinning is very easy. The easiest bird I ever cleaned was a quail and that is some delicious meat but you have to raise a lot of quail to have enough meat. I need about 6 quails to satisfy me for one meal. A chicken can give me food for several days.
The advantage to skinning, I find, is largely restricted to very old chickens where the cooking process will not result in a palatable skin, and to those small scale producers who can't justify the expense of a scalding operation to take a bird or two each week, and have more valuable uses of their time.

I like crispy skin - but if I'm crocking a 12 mo old bird, sausaging it, or worse, smoking it, the skin has no value to me - even the dogs won't touch it for more than a few moments - but the time savings I enjoy by disrobing the thing allows me other, more productive, opportunities.
 
The advantage to skinning, I find, is largely restricted to very old chickens where the cooking process will not result in a palatable skin, and to those small scale producers who can't justify the expense of a scalding operation to take a bird or two each week, and have more valuable uses of their time.

I like crispy skin - but if I'm crocking a 12 mo old bird, sausaging it, or worse, smoking it, the skin has no value to me - even the dogs won't touch it for more than a few moments - but the time savings I enjoy by disrobing the thing allows me other, more productive, opportunities.
I keep telling muself that I just need to get organized and a better set-up for processing. The first attempt at making a plucker with the little rubber fingers was a complete bust. The fine points of that will require many prototypes. As it stands, I can barely heat up a scalding pot with the equipment available. Butchering is not allowed in the kitchen. If I claimed to be a homesteader I'd have to admit failure.
 

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