tickens33
Chirping
Hi all. Processed my first animal ever today. It was pretty gross and I was a little emotional, but overall it seemed like we were successful. I have some questions to make sure it’s all squared away.
I apologize if any of these questions are silly as I have never butchered an animal before, nor have I eaten meat in many years, so I might be asking some things that seem obvious. Hopefully this will be the end of my vegetarianism, if we did it all right
1. How can we be positive we got all the organs out? I mean it looks like we did. First we got the crop from the head side, then yanked out most of the stuff (definitely identified heart, gizzard, liver, intestines) from the vent side. Then we pulled out the lungs, we got the kidneys, which kind of “scrambled” as one of the BYC butchering articles says. At the very end we got a couple pieces of esophagus that it seems like we missed somehow at the beginning.
2. If we somehow did leave organ pieces behind, would that taint the meat or make a dish unsafe to eat? We were planning on cooking the whole carcass in a soup.
3. Time sensitive question- How to store the bird now? I’ve seen so many mixed opinions on this. We are planning on cooking it within the next few days. It’s currently in a ziploc bag in the fridge.
But it looks like water from rinsing the bird is pooling up in the ziploc. Should I drain it and/or put it in a new bag? Am I supposed to wrap the bag in a towel? Bird wrapped in towel inside bag?
4. During butchering we punctured the crop (the reason we culled this bird was because it had a pendulous crop and we didn’t want it to go any further and suffer, so the crop was really large and hard to work with) and the intestines.
Both the crop and the intestines got like a few little particles of waste on the meat but overall we were really careful about not letting it get all on the meat. We rinsed it very thoroughly many times throughout the process and it now looks “clean”. Is there any reason to think the meat is contaminated in such a way that wouldn’t be addressed by thoroughly cooking?
If it turns out the meat is not good to eat, then I will still be grateful for the learning experience, but really hoping it’s edible!!! Other than the enlarged crop, which we knew about before opening up the bird, we didn’t notice anything that seemed out of the ordinary from our research.
Huge thanks to anyone with some advice!
I apologize if any of these questions are silly as I have never butchered an animal before, nor have I eaten meat in many years, so I might be asking some things that seem obvious. Hopefully this will be the end of my vegetarianism, if we did it all right

1. How can we be positive we got all the organs out? I mean it looks like we did. First we got the crop from the head side, then yanked out most of the stuff (definitely identified heart, gizzard, liver, intestines) from the vent side. Then we pulled out the lungs, we got the kidneys, which kind of “scrambled” as one of the BYC butchering articles says. At the very end we got a couple pieces of esophagus that it seems like we missed somehow at the beginning.
2. If we somehow did leave organ pieces behind, would that taint the meat or make a dish unsafe to eat? We were planning on cooking the whole carcass in a soup.
3. Time sensitive question- How to store the bird now? I’ve seen so many mixed opinions on this. We are planning on cooking it within the next few days. It’s currently in a ziploc bag in the fridge.
But it looks like water from rinsing the bird is pooling up in the ziploc. Should I drain it and/or put it in a new bag? Am I supposed to wrap the bag in a towel? Bird wrapped in towel inside bag?
4. During butchering we punctured the crop (the reason we culled this bird was because it had a pendulous crop and we didn’t want it to go any further and suffer, so the crop was really large and hard to work with) and the intestines.
Both the crop and the intestines got like a few little particles of waste on the meat but overall we were really careful about not letting it get all on the meat. We rinsed it very thoroughly many times throughout the process and it now looks “clean”. Is there any reason to think the meat is contaminated in such a way that wouldn’t be addressed by thoroughly cooking?
If it turns out the meat is not good to eat, then I will still be grateful for the learning experience, but really hoping it’s edible!!! Other than the enlarged crop, which we knew about before opening up the bird, we didn’t notice anything that seemed out of the ordinary from our research.
Huge thanks to anyone with some advice!