- Jan 9, 2010
- 24
- 1
- 22
OK, I'm a newbie, so forgive me if this is a realy novice question. At the farmers market a few weeks ago, one of the egg selling guys was selling off his retired layers as stewing hens. I keep reading on BYC about the wonders of chicken stock made from *real* chicken so i bought one and froze it for a rainy day. I thawed it over 24 hours for crockpotting today.
When i reached in the cavity, i guess i was thinking i'd find the innards and organs i;m using to seeing when i buy a store bought chicken. But the cavity was really messy and bloody. The flesh and skin look fine, i think, but the innards were not really cleaned out and pretty darn bloody. i cut out the backbone so i could see better, and some of this stuff i just couldn't easily separate, so i left the backbone out of the stock
My questions:
-- was this chicken processed, um, conventionally? was it bled out correctly? Just want to know what to expect in my chicken future....
-- What are these yellow-orange balls? There are two of equal size, like big marbles, and two little ones (capers), and then several more teeny ones that were attached to the innards(where the knife points). My boyfriend thought maybe they were eggs-in-the-making, but from what i've read in my books that's not how it works.
Enlighten me!
When i reached in the cavity, i guess i was thinking i'd find the innards and organs i;m using to seeing when i buy a store bought chicken. But the cavity was really messy and bloody. The flesh and skin look fine, i think, but the innards were not really cleaned out and pretty darn bloody. i cut out the backbone so i could see better, and some of this stuff i just couldn't easily separate, so i left the backbone out of the stock

My questions:
-- was this chicken processed, um, conventionally? was it bled out correctly? Just want to know what to expect in my chicken future....
-- What are these yellow-orange balls? There are two of equal size, like big marbles, and two little ones (capers), and then several more teeny ones that were attached to the innards(where the knife points). My boyfriend thought maybe they were eggs-in-the-making, but from what i've read in my books that's not how it works.
Enlighten me!

