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Unless you're cooking something specific for a lot of people in a time crunch, it doesn't make sense to buy packages of individual chicken parts. Even if you did need, say eight boneless breasts, you could just buy four birds, and freeze whatever you don't use. Anyway, imho, here's why you should be buying whole chickens.

It's much cheaper for starters. Used to see them less than a $1/lb, still under $2/lb now.

You get to work on your knife skills. Its worth knowing how to effortlessly break a bird down into its respective parts. You can even take it a step further and learn how to de-bone the bird without it looking like it went through a wood chipper.

It's all good. The wife likes boneless breast meat. (Also, likes her steaks well-done, so yeah.) Anyway, two boneless breasts coming up. Wings, add them to your ziploc bag with the others you've been saving in the freezer until you have enough for a meal. Thighs and drumsticks, roast or cook them in a skillet on the stove top. Once cooled down, pick off the meat for a recipe or just eat off the bone. Giblets, if you're not eating them, then use them for fishing bait or chum. Carcass, make stock out of it, be sure to add any of the bones, skin, fat, left after picking the meat off the leg quarters.

Also, imho, if you've never eaten a freshly killed, prepped, and cooked chicken, you've been missing out. Put it on your list of things to do.

Unless you're cooking something specific for a lot of people in a time crunch, it doesn't make sense to buy packages of individual chicken parts. Even if you did need, say eight boneless breasts, you could just buy four birds, and freeze whatever you don't use. Anyway, imho, here's why you should be buying whole chickens. It's much cheaper for starters. Used to see them less than a $1/lb, still under $2/lb now. You get to work on your knife skills. Its worth knowing how to effortlessly break a bird down into its respective parts. You can even take it a step further and learn how to de-bone the bird without it looking like it went through a wood chipper. It's all good. The wife likes boneless breast meat. (Also, likes her steaks well-done, so yeah.) Anyway, two boneless breasts coming up. Wings, add them to your ziploc bag with the others you've been saving in the freezer until you have enough for a meal. Thighs and drumsticks, roast or cook them in a skillet on the stove top. Once cooled down, pick off the meat for a recipe or just eat off the bone. Giblets, if you're not eating them, then use them for fishing bait or chum. Carcass, make stock out of it, be sure to add any of the bones, skin, fat, left after picking the meat off the leg quarters. Also, imho, if you've never eaten a freshly killed, prepped, and cooked chicken, you've been missing out. Put it on your list of things to do.

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[–] 2 pts 2y

Carcass, make stock out of it, be sure to add any of the bones, skin, fat, left after picking the meat off the leg quarters.

The value of the bone broth alone is enough reason to do this.

[–] 2 pts 2y

I agree but have one small qualm: the term "bone broth" is a marketing ploy. A stock is made with bones; a broth is made from bones (or stock) and reinforced with meat. Traditional broths will also include a cereal grain (barley for example) to make it into the base for a kind of soup. You add some mirepoix, wilted green, or cabbage, and you have many foundational hearty winter soups that are not stews. Regardless, there is no such thing as "bone broth." For the fun of it, look up some old French cookbooks--Larousse Gastronomique for instance--and discover the many iterations of delicious protein and collagen-laden waters!