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Americans to Eat 1.25 Billion Chicken Wings for Super Bowl
National Chicken Council ^

Posted on 01/24/2015 9:13:46 AM PST by SamAdams76

Washington, D.C. – With the second biggest eating day of the year after Thanksgiving upon us – Super Bowl Sunday – there’s no hotter time of year for chicken wings, which have become a staple food on Super Bowl menus.

According to the National Chicken Council’s 2015 Wing Report released today, 1.25 billion wings will be eaten during Super Bowl XLIX, as fans watch the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots battle for the Lombardi Trophy, matching the record tied last year when the Seahawks defeated the Denver Broncos.

Wings with RanchTo put that into perspective, if 1.25 billion wing segments were laid end to end, they would stretch back and forth from CenturyLink Field in Seattle to Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts… almost 28 times. With the Super Bowl being played in Arizona, 1.25 billion wings would circle the Grand Canyon 120 times. That is enough wings to put 572 wings on every seat in all 32 NFL stadiums, according to the Council.

In terms of weight, 1.25 billion wings would weigh 5,955 times more than the weights of the Seahawks and Patriots entire 52-man rosters combined.

“Although the total amount of pounds of chicken produced last year rose by about 1.8 percent, the total number of chickens processed was virtually the same in 2014 as it was in 2013,” noted National Chicken Council Vice President of Communications Tom Super. “A chicken only has two wings; therefore, the supply of wings is limited by the total number of chickens produced.”

The average price (wholesale, not retail) of whole wings is currently $1.71/lb, up from $1.35/lb at the same time last year, according to the Daily Northeast Broiler/Fryer Report by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Agriculture Marketing Service. This is down significantly from when wing prices hit a record high of $2.11/lb in January, 2013.

Wing prices traditionally go up in the fourth quarter of the year as restaurants and supermarkets stock up for the Super Bowl, and prices usually peak in January during the run-up to the big game.

Wing Eating among NFC-AFC Championship Cities

While Seattle is known for many things, including its coffee, fish tossing and Fortune 500 companies, chicken wings aren’t one of them.

Residents of Seattle tend to punt on chicken wings, as they are 17 percent less likely to eat chicken wings in general than the average resident of the top 42 U.S. markets, according to The NPD Group’s Local Market CREST Restaurant database; two years ending September 2014. While faring a bit better, but still below average, Patriots fans in Boston are 8 percent less likely to consume wings from a restaurant than the average resident.

But the Seahawks-Patriots matchup was the best possible scenario out of the four remaining NFL playoff teams/cities for wing eating. Here’ a look at how the four stack up:

Boston: 8 percent less likely to eat chicken wings in general than the average resident
Seattle: 17 percent less likely to eat wings
Indianapolis: 32 percent less likely to eat wings
Green Bay: 39 percent less likely to eat wings

“The good news is, fans will try more wings if their team gets in the Super Bowl,” noted Harry Balzer, The NPD Group’s chief industry analyst and vice president. “We know wing consumption increases more than other foods during the Super Bowl. It did in Seattle last year after they won. While the citizens of Seattle still eat wings less often than the average eater, our research indicates that order incidence for wings rose considerably last year in that market.”2015 Wing Report

Added the Chicken Council’s Super, “With the Patriots in the game, we’re hopeful this trend will continue and we’ll see ‘inflated’ wing consumption this year in New England.”

Super Bowl Fans Choose Sides

The data shows that more than four in five U.S. adults (81 percent) eat chicken wings, holding steady from last year. More than half (56 percent) of U.S. adults who eat chicken wings say they typically like to eat their wings with ranch dressing, according to a new National Chicken Council poll conducted online in January 2015 by Harris Poll*. Ranch is once again the #1 side or sauce typically eaten with wings, up from 51 percent last year but shy of the record of 57 percent two years ago. Only about one-third (36 percent) like to eat their wings with blue cheese dressing. This is up from 32 percent last year. Barbecue sauce even topped blue cheese, coming in at 42 percent.

The survey asked which dipping sauces or snacks chicken wing eaters typically like to eat with their wings. They could choose more than one option.

Northeastern wing eaters are significantly more likely to prefer blue cheese dressing (49 percent) than those in the Midwest (36 percent), South (30 percent) and West (30 percent), while those regions are more likely to prefer ranch dressing.

“I was shocked to see Blue Cheese go down by this margin, again,” noted Super. “Although, I’m from the Northeast – for me, putting Ranch on wings is like putting ketchup on a hot dog.”

After ranch dressing at the top: 42 percent of wing lovers choose barbecue sauce as a typical snack or dipping sauce; 36 percent said blue cheese; 36 percent hot sauce; 35 percent celery; and 20 percent choose carrots. Ten percent of wing lovers describe themselves as purists who eat nothing with their wings.

Bone-in or Boneless?

With the growing popularity of “boneless wings,” NCC asked wing eaters if they prefer to eat traditional, bone-in wings or boneless wings. According to the survey, 54 percent of wing eaters prefer traditional, bone-in wings while 46 percent chose their boneless cousin. Boneless wings are typically white, boneless chicken breasts cut into strips, breaded or floured and tossed with Buffalo sauce.

Chicken Wing Type EditsThe Drumette, Flat or Whole Wing?

The vast majority of wings, especially those destined for restaurants, are disjointed, with the third joint (the thin part known as the wing tip or flapper) being exported to Asian countries and the meatier first and second joints being sold domestically. The wing is usually split into two parts – or segments – known as the “drumette” and the “flat” and sold to restaurants or retail grocery outlets.

According the survey, of those who eat chicken wings, 46 percent prefer the drumette, 25 percent the flat and 10 percent prefer their wings whole. Nineteen percent say they don’t have a preference, they like them all.

Where do Americans Get their Wings?

The National Chicken Council estimates that of the wings eaten during the Super Bowl, 75 percent will come from food service outlets and 25 percent from retail grocery stores.

Although the vast majority of wings eaten during the Super Bowl are purchased from food service outlets, such as restaurants, bars and wing and pizza places, wing sales at grocery stores and supermarkets spike dramatically the week of the Super Bowl, and the data show that consumers also stock up the week before, too.

According to Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts® data, both fresh and prepared wings totaled $1.7 billion in sales at stores covered in their system for the 52 weeks ending November 29, 2014, an increase of 3.1 percent compared to a year earlier. Total pounds sold were up 3.9 percent to 543 million.

Consumers cooking their own wings at home can find traditional and unique chicken wing recipes on the National Chicken Council website at www.eatchicken.com

Super Bowl Spike

Although America’s taste for chicken wings is no hotter than during Super Bowl weekend, the National Chicken Council estimates that overall in 2014 more than 14 billion chicken wings, more than 3.3 billion pounds, will be marketed as wings (as opposed to the wings on a whole or rotisserie chicken, for example). The actual number of wing portions sold is estimated to be 28 billion because, as noted above, the vast majority of wings are cut into two segments or portions.

Buffalo Chicken Wing History

Deep-fried chicken wings have long been a staple of Southern cooking. But the concept of cooking wings in peppery hot sauce was born in 1964 at the Anchor Bar in Buffalo, New York, when co-owner Teressa Bellissimo cooked leftover wings in hot sauce as a late-night snack for her son and his friends. The guys liked them so much that the Bellissimos put them on the menu the next day. Served with celery slices and bleu cheese sauce, “Buffalo Wings” were an instant hit.

Dick Winger, who sold hot sauce to the bar, went on the road with Dominic Bellissimo, the owners’ son, to promote the item and sell hot sauce, and the item gradually caught on with restaurant operators around the country. The concept hit the big time in 1990, when McDonald’s began selling Mighty Wings at some of its restaurants. KFC rolled out Hot Wings a year later, and Domino’s Pizza introduced its own wings in 1994. They’ve remained hot ever since. McDonald’s was back in the wing business last year, and its Mighty Wings will be featured nationwide at most restaurants through the first quarter of 2014.

Chicken Wings and Football – A Love Story

The rise of the chicken wing and its correlation to American football all had to do with timing.

Cooking the whole bird was trendy in the sixties and seventies, but in the eighties U.S. consumers started preferring boneless-skinless breast meat, and wings became an inexpensive byproduct for chicken producers. Restaurants and bars realized they could charge low prices for the relatively inexpensive protein, and due to the spicy/salty nature of the sauce, they discovered that beer sales would go through the roof when customers ate wings.

At the same time, sports bars with multiple TVs and satellite dishes were becoming more and more common in America thanks to rapidly developing technology; and the most popular sporting event to watch with friends in bars is football. Wings were easily shareable and affordable, a great “group food” to eat with other people, and are the perfect pairing with a pitcher of beer. And so the pigskin-chicken wing bond was born.

*Survey Methodology

This survey was conducted online within the United States by Harris Poll on behalf of National Chicken Council from January 13-15, 2015 among 2,019 adults ages 18 and older (of whom 1,595 eat chicken wings). This online survey is not based on a probability sample and therefore no estimate of theoretical sampling error can be calculated. For complete survey methodology, including weighting variables, please contact Tom Super at tsuper@chickenusa.org


TOPICS: Weird Stuff
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To: SamAdams76

I’ve never seen a man eat so many chicken wings....

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmBM8vpRMMQ


21 posted on 01/24/2015 9:44:59 AM PST by dfwgator
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To: Yardstick
I also checked their math on their contention that you could put 572 chicken wings in every NFL stadium seat.

Number of NFL stadums = 32

Average capacity = 70,000

Total capacity = 2,240,000

Putting 572 chicken wings in each of those seats will total out to 1,281,280,000 chicken wings. So yes, they appear to be in the ballpark with the 1.25 billion wings.

Quite a job for the clean-up crews however.

22 posted on 01/24/2015 9:47:27 AM PST by SamAdams76
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To: SamAdams76

I LOVE chicken wings. Just made them last night and will probably make more today.

I do a Franks/margarine/minced onion, habanero, garlic/honey sauce w/ homemade blue cheese dressing.

Can’t get enough.


23 posted on 01/24/2015 9:48:08 AM PST by FlJoePa
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To: SamAdams76

So that’s 625,000,000 chickens??


24 posted on 01/24/2015 9:50:34 AM PST by OrangeHoof (Every time you say no to a liberal, you make the Baby Barack cry.)
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To: SamAdams76
Americans to Eat 1.25 Billion Chicken Wings for Super Bowl

....and that's just Micheal Moore.

25 posted on 01/24/2015 9:52:04 AM PST by GreenHornet
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To: All
Heart healthy.

Okay---you can dip the veggies in guacamole.

26 posted on 01/24/2015 9:52:57 AM PST by Liz
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To: SamAdams76
Fixed it for them!

They'd probably serve Natty Light!

27 posted on 01/24/2015 9:56:08 AM PST by W. (All politics is local--as is political corruption, bottom to top!)
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To: SamAdams76

Might be a good time to sell chickens short.


28 posted on 01/24/2015 9:59:56 AM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Celtic Conservative

Until some genius invented buffalo wings, wings were considered scrap or junk cuts.
__________________________________________________________

The ‘genius’ was a she. She and her husband own the Anchor Bar in Buffalo, NY. Her son showed up from college with some friends late one night looking for something to eat. She was getting ready to boil up a bunch of chicken wings to make chicken stock. Instead she fried up the wings with hot sauce and serve them up.

Thus a legend was born.


29 posted on 01/24/2015 10:07:43 AM PST by chaosagent (Remember, no matter how you slice it, forbidden fruit still tastes the sweetest!)
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To: Le Chien Rouge

Tri-tip cut bite-sized, wings, potato skins, all from the barbie.


30 posted on 01/24/2015 10:12:18 AM PST by umgud (I couldn't understand why the ball kept getting bigger......... then it hit me.)
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To: SamAdams76

I am making PORK LOIN instead!


31 posted on 01/24/2015 10:14:51 AM PST by Mr. K (Palin/Cruz 2016 (for 16 years of conservative bliss))
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To: Celtic Conservative

“Until some genius invented buffalo wings, wings were considered scrap or junk cuts.”

Next thing you know, they’ll have Goal Post chicken. That’s the part that would go over the goal post last if you kicked a chicken for a goal.

Just avoid “Chicken-O’s”. You know, the part in the back where eggs and stuff come from.


32 posted on 01/24/2015 10:26:26 AM PST by USMCPOP (Father of LCpl. Karl Linn, KIA 1/26/2005 Al Haqlaniyah, Iraq)
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To: SamAdams76

What bothers me is that these fast food restaurants cut a chicken wing in half and count it as two pieces!!!


33 posted on 01/24/2015 10:29:42 AM PST by Cowboy Bob (They are called "Liberals" because the word "parasite" was already taken.)
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To: SamAdams76

Thank god for Franks Red Hot Sauce!!


34 posted on 01/24/2015 10:43:09 AM PST by mowowie (`)
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To: SamAdams76

Oh the chicanery!

750 million chickens must die as penance for Tom Brady’s footballs.


35 posted on 01/24/2015 11:26:29 AM PST by oldbill
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To: SamAdams76

None will be eaten by me. I stick to breast meat removed from the bone. Seems to be another of my weird OCD things I have picked up over the years. I don’t like my poultry to still be on the bone. Yet I have no problem with beef or pork.

From watching other people eat wings I have come to the conclusion they are just a vehicle for sauce and dips anyways since not much meat on most of the wings I have seen.


36 posted on 01/24/2015 12:01:37 PM PST by CARDINALRULES (Tough times never last -Tough people do. DK57 --RIP 6-22-02)
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To: SamAdams76; Yardstick

Put ‘em to work checking Zer0’s budget numbers.


37 posted on 01/24/2015 12:20:21 PM PST by Slings and Arrows ("Ragnarok" - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4L5nD7-qsEw)
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To: USMCPOP

Close. Very close.

38 posted on 01/24/2015 12:22:14 PM PST by Slings and Arrows ("Ragnarok" - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4L5nD7-qsEw)
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To: Bigtigermike

Back in the 1960s many times the chicken wings were thrown away. It was not until the 1980s that Buffalo Wings were that popular outside of western NY. Even up until the 1990s the wing was still the cheapest per pound part of the chicken. Now, especially this time of year it is the most expensive chicken part per pound.

If your ever in Buffalo, make sure you stop by the Anchor Bar, listen to some jazz, eat some of their wings and wash it down with a Labatts.


39 posted on 01/24/2015 1:06:34 PM PST by woodbutcher1963
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To: woodbutcher1963
If your ever in Buffalo, make sure you stop by the Anchor Bar ...

Did that once way back around 1980. Business took me to upstate NY on occasion, Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo and a few points in between; so on one trip to Buffalo I made a point of stopping by the Anchor Bar for chicken wings ... not bad.

40 posted on 01/24/2015 1:20:29 PM PST by BluH2o
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