Making Chicken and Noodles with our Rooster

We recently processed our very first chicken, one of our roosters. It was an interesting process, one I hope we will repeat. It's quite a skill!

Now it's time to eat the little guy.

I cooked him for probably 4 hours, then stripped all the meat I could off the bones. Believe me, there wasn't much. Thankfully chicken and noodles doesn't require a lot of meat.

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Next I made noodles! I use my bread machine's egg noodle recipe. I just add the ingredients and wait 20 minutes for to mix and knead the dough, and then wait 30 minutes for the dough to rest.

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After letting the dough rest, I cut it into four parts. I knead one part and flatten it with my hands.

For Christmas a few years ago, my husband bought me the pasta attachments for my KitchenAid stand mixer. I love them.

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So like I said, I flatten one of the dough balls with my hands. I then begin to feed it through the rollers to flatten it. It takes 4 passes, each on a different thickness setting, to get it flat enough to run through the noodle cutter.

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I cut the noodles using the linguine cutter. There is also a spaghetti cutter but that is too fine for what I'm doing.

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I cut all the dough into noodles and then let the noodles rest on my pasta rack until I am ready to use them. You can freeze them for later use, but I've never tried.

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Those are some sexy noodles!

I got my chicken meat and broth boiling good and slowly add the noodles.

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I add a little cornstarch and eventually the whole mixture thickens.

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And I'm done! Time to feed the troops!

We didn't tell the kids we were eating one of the chickens...until after. They didn't seem to mind and said it was really tasty. So it looks like we will definitely be processing more of our chickens as the time comes. I felt really good about making this meal knowing it wasn't full of preservatives or nasty chemicals. It was really delicious!

Thanks for checking this post out! Hope you're staying warm and cozy!

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I love how you keep referring to the rooster as him, lol

We had hens when we were kids I was cool with culling to eat them, but my brother used to cry. he still is a little bit of a wus when it comes to animals,
my dad used to tell him, they are there for food not as pets.
you eat the eggs so why not the chicken.

crazy. looks yummy anyway thanks for sharing

Our girls cried when we told them we were going to butcher some of the chickens. After we did it though and were able to eat this one, they've been fine. I think they realized we aren't keeping chickens as pets. They're our food.
Thanks so much for your comments and for stopping by, @artonmysleeve!

Not a problem @hethur240
When my oldest daughter was about 5 we went to a farm, she didn't know where meat came from at the time and when she found out that the chickens we were looking at were the food we eat well that made a few tears run.
she now only eats fish

Aww! Poor girl!
I thought I would have a problem eating this first one, but in the end I didn't care. I spent all day working on dinner and was happy to finally get to eat it. Haha!

winner winner chicken dinner as they say.
I like fresh eggs from chickens that are home reared the taste so much better than store-bought crap. the yolk is more orange than yellow, the taste is so much better, they don't split when you crack them, so I am pro do it at home. :)

The chicken and the noodles are looking so tasty! :)

yummy :)

Yum! Glad everyone enjoyed the meal and had no problem with it's origin. Looks like it was very tasty!

Thanks, @aunt-deb! It was a little stronger than we are used to but it wasn't tough like I was afraid it would be.

That makes sense. I know the first time I had grass-fed beef, I couldn't believe the difference in flavor! There WAS some... flavor that is! I think y'all are going to have a new 'normal'. Also nice to hear it wasn't tough. Good job!

Homemade noodles! It all looked very taste we haven't harvested one of our birds in awhile, but if they don't start laying again here soon we may have some soup of our own. Unless your just wanting to pluck them to save the skin its so much easier to actually skin the chickens in our opinion. So much faster when you don't have a plucking "machine" of sorts.

It wasn't terribly hard to pluck him. We scalded him first and the feathers came right out. When we get quail and the time comes to eat them, we are going to skin them and just harvest the meat that way.
Thanks so much for stopping by, @beatitudes8!

Nothing better than homemade and homegrown chicken noodle soup. Nutritious and delicious!

Indeed! Can't get much better! Thanks for stopping by, @bluerthangreen!

Homegrown chicken and homemade noodles, looks delicious! I love how many attachments the kitchenaid stand mixer has available, I didn't even know there was a noodle attachment.

Thanks so much, @rakkasan84! Our next attachment is going to be a meat grinder and sausage stuffer! It's so much easier having a small attachment than another giant contraption in the kitchen.

That I is awesome I have wanted to try making noodles

I was really nervous at first, but now that I've made them a few times I'm much more comfortable. I hope you give it a try!

Omg! everything in this post it's so right! what a incredible recipe! and it looks so tasty... nice post an very well explained

I like eating chicken
Your chicken looks great 😂

Thanks, @greatdan! I like eating chicken too!

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