POULTRY

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POULTRY

Poultry is one of the most popular meats found upon the American table. Dry-picked poultry is the most sanitary and desirable. It is no simple matter to provide fresh poultry to our thickly populated cities. But with improved breeding, scientific feeding and the modern cold-storage houses and refrigerator cars, Armour and Company supply a large clientele with either fresh or cold-storage poultry of the highest quality. “Spring chickens,” so called because before the days of storage they could be obtained only in the spring—are from three to six months old. The older members of the chicken family are known as “fowl.”

chicken
Roast Fowl
HOW TO SELECT

A chicken’s feet are soft and smooth and the end of the breastbone is flexible. Poultry that is to be carried over from the season of plenty is carefully selected and specially fed and prepared. Only the choicest corn and milk fed poultry is worthy of the skill and science displayed in modern cold storage. Scientific methods of packing fresh poultry, and shipment in the refrigerator cars originated by the packers, assures the most select fresh poultry in season. The undrawn poultry is preferred to the drawn poultry in the market.

To thaw frozen poultry, submerge it in a pan of cold water and leave in the water until thawed—about four hours for a four-pound hen. Cook as soon as thawed.

To “draw,” it is only necessary to make an incision below the breastbone just large enough to insert the hand and remove the entire viscera at once. Separate the giblets, remove the gall bladder without breaking it, and clean the gizzard by cutting through the flesh and removing the inside sack intact; peel the fleshy part off the sack. Insert two fingers under the skin of the breast and draw out and discard crop and windpipe. Wash the inside of the bird by allowing clean cold water to run through it. Wipe inside and out. From this point the chicken is treated according to the method to be used in cooking. If it is to be “fried,” it is split in half lengthwise, if very young, or in smaller pieces if it is a fowl. For a roast, the chicken is left whole; for stewing, the fowl is entirely disjointed.

REFERENCES

U. S. Dept, of Ag. Bulletins. Circulars 61-64. “Studies of Poultry from the Farm to the Consumer.” “How to Kill and Market Poultry” by M. E. Pennington. “Poultry as Food.”

WAYS OF SERVING CHICKEN (also see pages 32 and 40)

Chicken Accompaniments
Roast Mashed Potatoes—Creamed Onions
Fricasseed Steamed Potatoes, Parsnips
Smothered Corn Fritters, Peas
Fried Mashed Potatoes, Jelly
Baked Stuffed Glazed Sweet Potatoes
Broiled Shoe String Potatoes, Combination Salad
Chicken À la King Potato Chips, Tomato and Lettuce Salad
Chicken Patties Mashed Potatoes, Jelly
Curried Steamed Rice with Parsley
Cold Sliced Au Gratin Potatoes, Jelly
Croquettes Creamed Potatoes and Sweetbreads
Chicken Hash Steamed Rice, Jelly
Chicken en Casserole Carrots, Baked Onions and Potato Balls
Chicken Pie Potatoes—Stewed Tomatoes
Chicken in Aspic Jelly Potato Croquettes
Creamed Baked Potatoes—Sliced Cucumbers

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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