stevez wrote:Believe it or not, the Jewel on Howard near McCormick sells Aaron's Chickens in their pretty large kosher department.
sdritz wrote:We don't keep kosher, never will, yet my family prefers kosher chicken to any old chicken from the store. It's got more flavor. I recently bought "regular" chicken for dinner and cooked it the same way I usually cook chicken. I've been instructed to never buy "regular" chicken again -- it just doesn't taste that good to my family any more.
When I can't buy kosher, the Amish brand of chicken is acceptable to my family. I think it's Miller's Amish, but I'm not 100% sure.
Suzy
sdritz wrote:We don't keep kosher, never will, yet my family prefers kosher chicken to any old chicken from the store. It's got more flavor. I recently bought "regular" chicken for dinner and cooked it the same way I usually cook chicken. I've been instructed to never buy "regular" chicken again -- it just doesn't taste that good to my family any more.
When I can't buy kosher, the Amish brand of chicken is acceptable to my family. I think it's Miller's Amish, but I'm not 100% sure.
Suzy
Mhays wrote:You half-answered my question - are the birds in question good-quality, beyond the salt?
Mhays wrote:You half-answered my question - are the birds in question good-quality, beyond the salt? I had an Amish bird a while back, and we're having trouble eating just plain chicken..
Darren72 wrote:When you have the time, try brining the Amish chicken (or a good farmer's market chicken).
LAZ wrote:Darren72 wrote:When you have the time, try brining the Amish chicken (or a good farmer's market chicken).
Well, if what you're trying to emulate is the taste of a kosher chicken, why not just kasher it? Takes less time than brining:
Submerge the bird in tepid water for 30 minutes. Drain. Coat thoroughly with kosher salt, inside and outside, and let stand on a slanted board 1 hour. Rinse thoroughly.
It used to be that every Jewish housewife did this herself, but nowadays the butchers mostly do it.
Sam Harmon wrote:Amish poultry (fresh, raised within an hour of town and bought at the indoor, year-round public market--how the hell does Columbus have one but not Chicago!)
jlawrence01 wrote:Sam Harmon wrote:Amish poultry (fresh, raised within an hour of town and bought at the indoor, year-round public market--how the hell does Columbus have one but not Chicago!)
The largest Amish community in the WORLD is located in and around Holmes Co., Ohio and many Amish familes are moving south toward Columbus as land prices in the Wooster/Ashland, OH areas are escalating.
The Amish communities in Illinois (Arthur/Arcola, IL) is much smaller, tend to raise mostly turkeys (for the Jennio brand, I believe), and much further to market in Chicago.
Sam Harmon wrote:and bought at the indoor, year-round public market--how the hell does Columbus have one but not Chicago!)
Miller's Amish chickens are regularly available at Sunset Foods
Mhays wrote:Although not "organic," and there's no mention of whether these chickens have access to the outside, they do talk about the chicken's diet being vegetarian and hormone-free. Can anybody offer a Whole Paycheck organic chicken price comparison?
MikeLM wrote:The former Boback's Market in Burr Ridge has the Miller's Amish chicken on a regular basis. Don't remember the price, though; must not have been outrageous.