Eating a fox-mauled chicken?
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Eating a fox-mauled chicken?
One of our chickens got caught by a fox this morning. I scared the fox away but a quick assessment of the chicken was that it was in pain, couldn't walk and had a few deep bite marks on it's back.
I dispatched the chicken to put it out of it's misery.
In order not to waste it I'm thinking of making it into a well boiled soup/stock, but i'm wondering what horrible bacteria and diseases the foxes teeth will have embedded in the flesh.
What does the panel think? Stockpot or bin?
Thanks
Sam
I dispatched the chicken to put it out of it's misery.
In order not to waste it I'm thinking of making it into a well boiled soup/stock, but i'm wondering what horrible bacteria and diseases the foxes teeth will have embedded in the flesh.
What does the panel think? Stockpot or bin?
Thanks
Sam
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- adam2
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I would think twice about eating the chicken, whilst thoroughly boiling SHOULD render it safe, I would not feel happy eating it.
In emergency if food be be very short I might eat it, but not whilst times are normal.
In emergency if food be be very short I might eat it, but not whilst times are normal.
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"
- emordnilap
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'The bin' sounds, well, pretty much a last resort.
Another answer is to compost it. Providing the heap reaches around 44-45°C for a week (easily reached in our humanure heaps) or it's left for 18 months after closing, you'll find little in the heap when you come to spread the compost.
We put a goose in ours; a few bones (which break down in the soil nice and slowly anyway) and a few quills but nothing else was recognisable. It meant that, as vegans, we ate the goose...
Another answer is to compost it. Providing the heap reaches around 44-45°C for a week (easily reached in our humanure heaps) or it's left for 18 months after closing, you'll find little in the heap when you come to spread the compost.
We put a goose in ours; a few bones (which break down in the soil nice and slowly anyway) and a few quills but nothing else was recognisable. It meant that, as vegans, we ate the goose...
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
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We kept turkeys when I was a kid. One Christmas we killed and plucked them and hung them in a shed. Rats got in and ate a good part of one of them. Now these were Xmas presents to family members and we had no money to buy more conventional presents, so my mother trimmed and jointed the nibbled turkey and gave it to her parents "already jointed so you can cook it separately and not have to eat the whole thing at once". No ill effects reported.
I'd throw the chicken in the pressure cooker and make stock for a noodle soup.
I'd throw the chicken in the pressure cooker and make stock for a noodle soup.
"Tea's a good drink - keeps you going"
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I see little logic in this. Either it is safe to eat or it isn't . Eating tainted food during an emergency would put you in the victims column just when there was no one there to treat your mistake. Better to spend the day staving then to spend it puking you guts out.adam2 wrote:I would think twice about eating the chicken, whilst thoroughly boiling SHOULD render it safe, I would not feel happy eating it.
In emergency if food be be very short I might eat it, but not whilst times are normal.
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- RenewableCandy
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Alcohol, heck why didn't I think of that?? Kills everything that the cooking might have missed
You know, they should carry out research as to whether it kills (or de-activates or whatever) prion-type things if you cook them in alcohol. This would be extremely useful, but you'd stand no chance of getting a grant for it unless you could convince people that it constitutes an important step on the road to A Cure For Cancer...
You know, they should carry out research as to whether it kills (or de-activates or whatever) prion-type things if you cook them in alcohol. This would be extremely useful, but you'd stand no chance of getting a grant for it unless you could convince people that it constitutes an important step on the road to A Cure For Cancer...