Real, Finger-Lickin' Chicken

07 July 2010 | 17:07 - By Matthew Evans

This is a picture of a dead chicken. Doesn’t look like one from a supermarket, does it? Look at the length of the legs, the colour of the fat, the occasional dark pin feather and the shape of the breasts.

That’s because this one foraged on grass for months, not lived in a shed for weeks. It might have eaten snails or caterpillars. It undoubtedly would’ve tried to eat moths. And the deep golden colour comes not from corn, but from the beta-carotene that it has captured from its forage – the same golden hue that gives the yolks such deep colour in its eggs.

This chicken isn’t one of mine. It’s from my next-door neighbour, a family who rear a few different animals and yet only eat a little meat. Duane is an expert plucker, and he had these dispatched and ready for the pot before I’d had a chance to go over and give him a hand. He breeds buff orpingtons, an old breed that is good for both meat and eggs. And like all those who keep chickens, he ended up with more roosters than anyone could actually want or need. Hence the arrival of this nude looking carcass at the back door – a young rooster who had just started to crow.

I have discovered the real taste of food since I moved to the country. The way things are supposed to taste, and in many cases, the way things don’t really taste if they’re mass produced. When you’ve had your own turkey, your own dry-aged beef, your own lamb or pork, when you’ve tasted the depth of flavour in lettuce grown in the ground not in water, broccoli cut from the plant and eaten within seconds, asparagus snapped from the ground and eaten in the garden, then you’ll know how ingredients should taste.

Mostly, they taste of themselves. But it’s a better self than you knew before. It’s concentrated in flavour. The aromas are far more complex, they linger for longer. The meats are bolder and richer, and you use less of them in your cooking. The vegetables are so satisfying they alone can carry the meal.

Old breed chickens, I’ve found, are currently in vogue. Today I visited a famed southern Tasmanian breeder, Philip Evans (no relation) and his enormous flock. In the 1950s, he tells me, everybody used to use white leghorns for eggs.

Philip reckons the best meat bird is a light sussex. Today the breeds used for eggs and meat are hybrids, fast growing in the case of meat (and with all white feathers) and laying machines in the case of egg birds. For 53 years he’s bred classic varieties (rhode island red and whites, coronation sussex, Indian game birds amongst many others) and he’s stoked to see a revival of interest in them.

My old-breed, recently-deceased chicken will get cooked with garlic grown by a friend down the road. (Ran out of my own garlic a few weeks back.) I’ll wet-roast it with some perry, pear cider, that I made last year. A lemon halved and squeezed is shoved up the cloaca, a lemon from a tree in Cradoc just over the hill. The plan is to serve it with roasted carrots and beets, along with kale and beetroot tops, all from the garden. I’ll have to buy in spuds, though. Ate all mine and there’s no potatoes in the ground right now.

While the cooker’s on, it seems like the perfect time to make apple crumble for pud.

Share article: 
top

Comments (7)

   
13 Jul 2010 08:52 AEST
Sharyn Ryan
From Giralang
Just finished watching your series on DVD and jumped straight on line to find out more. Loved the show and loved watching how much you loved your animals - very sweet. Thank you for sharing your very courageous life decision with us all. Now to plan a trip to Tassie! The blog is great too!

Report this

Agree (3 people agree)
Disagree (0 people disagree)
13 Jul 2010 12:51 AEST
Andrew Allen
'its brethren’s eggs.' just a small point. Brethren means brothers. Your chicken's brethren do not lay eggs. Lovely piece just the same!

Report this

Agree (0 people agree)
Disagree (0 people disagree)
10 Jul 2010 03:56 AEST
From Gresford
Hi, A few years ago we moved to the Hunter Valley and toyed with the idea of breeding large black pigs. After a few years of drought and lack of good green feed we have sent our pigs off to another farm that has lots of green feed. I saw Matthew evans of the television in the past few days and want to discuss the type of fencing he uses to keep the pigs in each of the cells. We now have Clyde the Boar and would like to expand and have pigs for our own food. Would you please forward this on.

Report this

Agree (3 people agree)
Disagree (0 people disagree)
09 Jul 2010 04:06 AEST
Tania B
From West kentish
One thing l havent had the guts to do is kill our own chooks for meat. Perhaps one day soon. Maybe after a chook house is built and we have enough to spare.

Report this

Agree (1 people agree)
Disagree (0 people disagree)
09 Jul 2010 11:00 AEST
Chris Jacques
Matthew please keep the blog coming, my Tasmanian dream is currently stalled although my wife and I are not going to give up on it. It is with a sense of relief that I see you have posted a new blog and unrealistically wish it would never end. Keep up the good work, you have inspired a lot of Australians.

Report this

Agree (14 people agree)
Disagree (0 people disagree)
08 Jul 2010 08:32 AEST
From Jamberoo, NSW
Yum. We're going to be dispatching a young cockeral this weekend too. I'm planning to wet-roast him with garlic and a lemon inside as well, with a big mess of spuds. Can't wait! I agree with you on the flavour thing. The first chook we killed ourselves tasted amazing. Totally different to anything I've ever bought. Instead of just being a bland white meat to carry the flavour of whatever herbs and spices and sauce it's cooked with, it actually has a beautiful flavour of its own.

Report this

Agree (6 people agree)
Disagree (0 people disagree)
08 Jul 2010 08:19 AEST
Pip Muir
From Kewarra Beach, Cairns
Your post inspires me to harrass my husband to get cracking building a chicken house. Alas, our labradors are nodding their heads and licking their lips in agreement, whilst colluding with our slightly evil cat. They would just LOVE some chickens too. I am so glad you keep writing this blog, it's fabulous.

Report this

Agree (6 people agree)
Disagree (0 people disagree)
   

Comment on this blog


http://

You have characters left.
Validation ( What's this? ) : This is a captcha-picture. It is used to prevent mass-access by robots.

PLEASE NOTE: All submitted comments become the property of SBS. We reserve the right to edit and/or amend submitted comments. HTML tags other than paragraph, line break, bold or italics will be removed from your comment.

ADVERTISEMENT

Featured Food & Recipes

Hot Tips

Ceviche

Who would have thought sweet potato and raw fish would work so well together! It’s delicious but must be eaten super FRESH.

Glossary

Biber Salcasi

A red pepper paste which can be hot or mild.

 
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
 
 
ADVERTISEMENT