Just make chicken salad out of the breast meat!
Works for me.....
--
Peace! Om
"Any ship can be a minesweeper. Once." -- Anonymous
I scored two very fresh looking chickens yesterday for 59 cents a pound. The
limit was two. We like a mix of white and dark meat in most dishes.
Actually, frugal doesn't mean cheap. Frugal means using everything,
not just the best bits. Or sort of.
The Frugal Gourmet didn't buy cheap ingredients - but he promoted the
idea of using all the bits of whatever he bought.
N.
Make soup. Or serve them when you have company who like white meat.
One question regarding "the same price": do you get the same percentage
of meat from leg quarters as from whole chickens?
--
Evelyn C. Leeper
Be braver. You cannot cross a chasm in two small jumps.
Leg quarters for 69 cents a pound.
No, my question i, if you remove all the bones and waste from four
pounds of whole chicken, do you get the same amount of meat as from four
pounds of leg quarters?
I'd say you probably get more meat off a whole chicken than from an
equivalent weight of leg quarters. Commercially raised chickens have
been bred for enormous, non functional breasts, much like those of the
current Hollywood actresses. If you can make use of it, dandy. But if
what really floats your boat is dark meat, the additional few cents per
pound to get what you really like is money well spent.
Okay, so why didn't you buy the leg quarters if they're the
same price and you like them better? I'm confused. Anyway,
I'm the same way I much prefer the dark meat. I hardly ever
buy chicken but when I do I go to Walmart and get a 10-lb.
bag (I think it's 10 lb.?) of leg quarters. The last time I
got them it was ~$4 change. It might be a little more now as
it's been a while.
Kate
--
Kate Connally
“If I were as old as I feel, I’d be dead already.”
Goldfish: “The wholesome snack that smiles back,
Until you bite their heads off.”
What if the hokey pokey really *is* what it's all about?
mailto:conn...@pitt.edu
Well, it's still less scrap for the stockpot than with a whole
chicken. And then you don't have to figure out what to do with
the damned breasts. ;-)
I would say definitely not. But someone should try it and
see what happens. ;-)
We have that Jack Sprat thing going on around here, only with light and dark
meat.
a match made in heaven, or at least close by.
your pal,
blake
Not quite, sugar britches. My heart belongs to you alone. Only my white meat
goes to my husband.
Don't have the equipment to measure. Only 2 bones on a leg quarter
but with the whole chick you got the back and neck bones as well as
the ribs.
Since roasters are more expensive per pound does that mean % of meat
is higher than a fryer?
I was trying to weed out some out-of-date books I never use and as I
flipped through the 1982 "Information Age Sourcebook" (no mention of
computers in THAT book) I found this chart, which might be quite
useful!
"Based on yields of cooked chicken.....the uncooked chicken weighed
2.75 lbs."
If a whole fryer costs 49 cents/lb:
Breast half without rib should cost 67
" " WITH rib should cost 65
Thighs should cost 55
Thighs & drumsticks should cost 53
Drumsticks should cost 50
Wings should cost 39.
If the fryer costs 51 cents/lb, prices are 70, 67, 57, 55, 53, 41.
Fryer at 53 cents: 72, 70, 59, 57, 55, 43.
Fryer at 55 cents: 75, 73, 61, 59, 57, 44.
" " 57 " : 78, 75, 63, 61, 59, 46.
" " 59 " : 80, 78, 66, 63, 61, 48.
" " 61 " : 83, 81, 68, 66, 63, 49.
" " 63 " : 86, 83, 70, 68, 65, 51.
That's not the entire chart, but I hope it will do. Note that the
ratios change a bit as you move down the chart.
(end)
Here are some responses to that:
Lenona.
he's entitled. i'll take what's left over.
your pal,
blake