Mountain Cat
Guru
- Joined
- 12 Apr 2019
- Local time
- 3:20 PM
- Messages
- 3,132
- Location
- Hilltowns of Massachusetts
- Website
- goatsandgreens.wordpress.com
I'm having chicken tonight. I'm not sure what the price breakdown will be, because she came from my back yard. I'm not raising them in high enough volume that I am doing a price breakout (I'm not selling chicken, just eggs - too many hoops to jump through to sell chickens at a small volume).
Pre-COVID, chicken I bought was in Tasty's categories of 3 and 4, mostly 3. During COVID it is 2 and 3. I only purchase dark meat. Okay, I did purchase bone in skin on breast once in order to test if it is improved by sous vide. (It is.) I've cooked some of my own chicken that way.
My chickens are essentially free range, but not organic: they do eat organic, soy-free feed (once they become layers, which means any associated roosters also eat that feed), while growing they usually eat organic but not soy free. The property they free-range* on could technically be called organic, if I wanted to go through the paperwork. But they also eat kitchen scraps of which some is, and some is not organic.
* Free range here means they go outdoors during the day time, but only if I am here most of the day. So they probably do go out more this year than the previous since I'm not travelling so much these days. They go in at night. And I got paranoid when I lost two chickens to a fox in a week, so they didn't go outdoors for two weeks after that. They also have NO interest in going out when there's snow on the ground.
I'll check prices of chicken next time I am out. Oh, i have a deal of $4 a stewing hen from a local farmer, that I will be taking him up on. He has nine; I'll probably take three. (Stewing hens are chickens intended for egg laying, that are too old to lay efficiently any more. People just raising a few chickens usually just leave them alone to lay just a couple eggs ever so often.)
The one for dinner tonight is a small Cornish meat hen - ten or eleven weeks old. (The supermarket ones are no older than 8 weeks)
Pre-COVID, chicken I bought was in Tasty's categories of 3 and 4, mostly 3. During COVID it is 2 and 3. I only purchase dark meat. Okay, I did purchase bone in skin on breast once in order to test if it is improved by sous vide. (It is.) I've cooked some of my own chicken that way.
My chickens are essentially free range, but not organic: they do eat organic, soy-free feed (once they become layers, which means any associated roosters also eat that feed), while growing they usually eat organic but not soy free. The property they free-range* on could technically be called organic, if I wanted to go through the paperwork. But they also eat kitchen scraps of which some is, and some is not organic.
* Free range here means they go outdoors during the day time, but only if I am here most of the day. So they probably do go out more this year than the previous since I'm not travelling so much these days. They go in at night. And I got paranoid when I lost two chickens to a fox in a week, so they didn't go outdoors for two weeks after that. They also have NO interest in going out when there's snow on the ground.
I'll check prices of chicken next time I am out. Oh, i have a deal of $4 a stewing hen from a local farmer, that I will be taking him up on. He has nine; I'll probably take three. (Stewing hens are chickens intended for egg laying, that are too old to lay efficiently any more. People just raising a few chickens usually just leave them alone to lay just a couple eggs ever so often.)
The one for dinner tonight is a small Cornish meat hen - ten or eleven weeks old. (The supermarket ones are no older than 8 weeks)