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Tips: |
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Don’t put
your tools away after the bird is disjointed. In the
following steps, you will also learn how to quickly
and deftly bone breasts and legs, and how to remove
the skin. |
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Steps
for Cutting Up a Whole Chicken |
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Chicken is so versatile that almost every part is
useful, as our recipes will deliciously demonstrate.
Packaged, ready-to-cook chicken pieces are widely
available and a great convenience, but cutting up a
whole chicken yourself is not the daunting or
time-consuming task some view it to be. In fact, it
is easily learned, quickly accomplished, and is such
a basic technique for working with poultry that it
should be part of every cook’s repertoire, even if
used only occasionally. It provides a foundation for
the entire book because once you are comfortable
with handling a whole chicken, you are better able
to put the parts to good use. |
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A further bonus: When you are the butcher you not
only produce portions that are custom-trimmed to
suit your needs, you also save money. A whole
chicken is usually far less expensive per pound than
an equivalent weight of poultry pieces because there
are no labor costs built into the price.
This section will take you step by step through
cutting up a whole bird. Another name for this
technique is disjointing, because you cut through
the elastic tendons and cartilage that surround the
joint rather than through solid bone. With practice,
you will be able to locate this soft tissue by
touch, and the process will go that much faster.
Very little specialized equipment is required to cut
up a chicken other than a sharp, good-quality boning
knife, poultry shears or kitchen scissors, and a
dishwasher-safe acrylic cutting board or wooden
board. Avoid boards that are made of hard plastic;
they will damage and dull your knives. Always wash
your hands, your tools, and the cutting surface with
hot soapy water after working with raw poultry to
keep them free of bacteria.
Boning knives are typically 10 inches long, with
thin, tapered, flexible blades that let you maneuver
around the curves and indentations of meat and bone.
Keep your boning knife (or any knife) properly honed
so it will slice cleanly without slipping. The
safest knife is a sharp knife. Poultry shears use a
spring-lever action for more cutting power, although
a pair of sturdy kitchen scissors will work almost
as well in most cases. |
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