"Chefs Larder" Chicken
Author
Discussion

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2009
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[redacted]

sleep envy

62,260 posts

273 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2009
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does it mention how the chickens were bred or kept before slaughter?

Mx_Stu

835 posts

247 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2009
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I buy our chicken breasts from our local butcher 4 for £5. They are huge. We used to buy all meat from the supermarket before discovering him. The amount of chicken you get on two breasts is easily as much as you get on four in the supermarket.

hadenough!

3,785 posts

284 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2009
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Looking at their website I'd say they are factory farmed as they sell a free range alterative for £13.99 per Kg, whereas your paying over a tenner less per kilo (£3.40).

I'm sure its edible and won't do you anyt harm, however personally I'd rather not eat chicken than eat that st.

Wadeski

8,860 posts

237 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2009
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(in some cases, literally, they eat reprocessed sh*t)

hadenough!

3,785 posts

284 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2009
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Wadeski said:
(in some cases, literally, they eat reprocessed sh*t)
Yep, and certainly spend their time living in their own.

hungry_hog

2,767 posts

212 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2009
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anonymous said:
[redacted]
So injected with growth hormone then?

sleep envy

62,260 posts

273 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2009
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it's hardly going to be be organic free range at that price...

sleep envy

62,260 posts

273 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2009
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well it will be full of steroids so I wouldn't eat it

saying that I smoke, drink and do worse so I'm hardly one to criticise what others put into their bodies but I try and balance the st that I do ingest with decent, organic food

grumbledoak

32,398 posts

257 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2009
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I'd check the country of origin, it should be on the packet and it'll give you a better idea of what may or may not have been pumped into it; UK laws are stricter than most.

But, at that price, they aren't going to have had a happy little life in the fields...

Shaw Tarse

31,836 posts

227 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2009
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grumbledoak said:
I'd check the country of origin, it should be on the packet and it'll give you a better idea of what may or may not have been pumped into it; UK laws are stricter than most.

But, at that price, they aren't going to have had a happy little life in the fields...
It's strange how concern for animal welfare, organic food has wained during the recession?
If all you're doing is making a curry then I'm sure the basics chicken will tste fine.

grumbledoak

32,398 posts

257 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2009
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Shaw Tarse said:
It's strange how concern for animal welfare, organic food has wained during the recession?
I'm not sure it has?

But, don't think of me as some kind of lentil-weaver. For quite a while, possibly even still, the US allowed cows to be given BST (a steroid). It gave them internal ulcers, which ruptured, and there was quite literally puss in their milk. Which was sold to the public. For years.

Call me self-centred, if you want...

Shaw Tarse

31,836 posts

227 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2009
quotequote all
grumbledoak said:
Shaw Tarse said:
It's strange how concern for animal welfare, organic food has wained during the recession?
I'm not sure it has?

But, don't think of me as some kind of lentil-weaver. For quite a while, possibly even still, the US allowed cows to be given BST (a steroid). It gave them internal ulcers, which ruptured, and there was quite literally puss in their milk. Which was sold to the public. For years.

Call me self-centred, if you want...
I maybe wrong (again) but it appeared to me that a few years ago, organic food was all the rage, along with banning sweatshops.
Now, if they can pick up 3 chicks for £10
Or a shirt for a couple of ££ they're happy.

sleep envy

62,260 posts

273 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2009
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the organic shelves at my local supermarkets tend to empty far quicker than the other shelves in the refrig cabinets