I currently have 16 chickens. 8 of those chickens are from this spring and have just started to lay eggs about 4 weeks ago. I need to harvest my older chickens that are now about 4 years old that no longer lay eggs. I want to get down to 10 or less chickens before winter.
I won't be buying an expensive chicken plucker for butchering only 8 birds, but I did need something to heat a pot of water outside. I talked to a person I know that uses a Turkey Fryer to heat his water for dipping the chickens in. It works well for him. With that in mind, I kept my eyes out for a sale on Turkey Fryers at our local big box stores. This week, Menards had a sale on this turkey fryer...
I had to order one because they were currently not in stock. It will be delivered next week.
In the meantime, I was wondering if anyone else uses these Turkey Fryers for making the water bath to dip the chickens in before plucking. Any suggestions on how best to use this fryer?
One minor concern I have is that this fryer has a 15 minutes hand-free timer control system. I know that is a safety feature for frying turkeys in oil where you don't want the oil to exceed a safe temperature and possibly catch fire. In my case, I will be using it for heating water, so there is no risk of it catching fire. Is there some way to bypass the 15-minute timer or will I have to manually restart the fryer every 15 minutes? I have seen many reviews of people who hate those timers. Having never used a turkey fryer to heat water for dipping the chickens, I don't know if this is an issue or not for butchering chickens.
Also, the guy I talked to about butchering chickens and using a turkey fryer for heating the dipping pot, he mentioned that he adds a little bit of dishwashing soap to the water. He claims that helps to clean up the chickens and makes it easier to pluck out the feathers. I am wondering if anyone else adds dishwashing soap to their water dipping baths?
Thank you for any advice or suggestions on butchering my old chickens. I have butchered chickens before, but I am always looking to find better ways. Last time was about 20 years ago when I had meat chickens, and I had lots of helpers. This time, it's basically only me for the entire process. Any suggestions for a one-man butchering operation would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
I won't be buying an expensive chicken plucker for butchering only 8 birds, but I did need something to heat a pot of water outside. I talked to a person I know that uses a Turkey Fryer to heat his water for dipping the chickens in. It works well for him. With that in mind, I kept my eyes out for a sale on Turkey Fryers at our local big box stores. This week, Menards had a sale on this turkey fryer...
I had to order one because they were currently not in stock. It will be delivered next week.
In the meantime, I was wondering if anyone else uses these Turkey Fryers for making the water bath to dip the chickens in before plucking. Any suggestions on how best to use this fryer?
One minor concern I have is that this fryer has a 15 minutes hand-free timer control system. I know that is a safety feature for frying turkeys in oil where you don't want the oil to exceed a safe temperature and possibly catch fire. In my case, I will be using it for heating water, so there is no risk of it catching fire. Is there some way to bypass the 15-minute timer or will I have to manually restart the fryer every 15 minutes? I have seen many reviews of people who hate those timers. Having never used a turkey fryer to heat water for dipping the chickens, I don't know if this is an issue or not for butchering chickens.
Also, the guy I talked to about butchering chickens and using a turkey fryer for heating the dipping pot, he mentioned that he adds a little bit of dishwashing soap to the water. He claims that helps to clean up the chickens and makes it easier to pluck out the feathers. I am wondering if anyone else adds dishwashing soap to their water dipping baths?
Thank you for any advice or suggestions on butchering my old chickens. I have butchered chickens before, but I am always looking to find better ways. Last time was about 20 years ago when I had meat chickens, and I had lots of helpers. This time, it's basically only me for the entire process. Any suggestions for a one-man butchering operation would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.