Lt.Mike
501 Club
After 15 years of neighborhood living my family moved back to a rural home. This was about 4 years ago. My wife wanted horses but I remembered the work involved when I was a kid and knew it would fall on me if I gave in. Vet and ferrier bills, nope not now. Maybe when I retire. Chickens! I'd like to raise chickens she said. Well not that I know all that much about chickens but ok, I agreed we'd do that.
Poor planning and preparation be damned it happened that I was at a flea market last summer saw some chicks, Rhoad island reds, and bought some, 20. Roosters, hens, dunno? Figured we'd eat the extra roosters.
Mind you with no housing prepared in advance. We setup a pen in the barn, provided heat and managed to raise 18 in all. 8 hens 10 roosters.
I built...well over-built, a proper 10x6' hen house that looks great in the back yard and provides warmth and shelter from the elements. The hens provide about 6 eggs a day which is working really well for us.
The problem is what to do with the roosters. We harvested one rooster which looked great in the pot but on the plate was as tough as an old boot. The legs were the darkest meat I ever saw for chicken, or at least that I've eaten. Still the problem remains, most of the roosters have got to go. They are beating up on the hens and each other so in the morning I've been separating them when they are let out. Hens in the pen and house, roosters free ranging. This gives the hens a break.
What I really want to know is does anyone know how to cook a rooster to make it tender and taste good?
Or...If you live in New Jersey do you want a free rooster?
Mike.
Poor planning and preparation be damned it happened that I was at a flea market last summer saw some chicks, Rhoad island reds, and bought some, 20. Roosters, hens, dunno? Figured we'd eat the extra roosters.
Mind you with no housing prepared in advance. We setup a pen in the barn, provided heat and managed to raise 18 in all. 8 hens 10 roosters.
I built...well over-built, a proper 10x6' hen house that looks great in the back yard and provides warmth and shelter from the elements. The hens provide about 6 eggs a day which is working really well for us.
The problem is what to do with the roosters. We harvested one rooster which looked great in the pot but on the plate was as tough as an old boot. The legs were the darkest meat I ever saw for chicken, or at least that I've eaten. Still the problem remains, most of the roosters have got to go. They are beating up on the hens and each other so in the morning I've been separating them when they are let out. Hens in the pen and house, roosters free ranging. This gives the hens a break.
What I really want to know is does anyone know how to cook a rooster to make it tender and taste good?
Or...If you live in New Jersey do you want a free rooster?
Mike.