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To: Flamenco Lady

Take the chicken carcass and put it in a pressure cooker for about 15 minutes at pressure, then the meat will literally fall off the bones................or, boil for 30 minutes covered. Reserve the liquid for stuffing or giblet gravy................


21 posted on 10/10/2011 12:42:05 PM PDT by Red Badger (Furthermore, I think Obama must be impeached....................)
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To: Red Badger

I already do that and believe me I save every bit of meat that falls off of those bones. I usually use all the cooking liquid as the base for my soups and stews.

I often throw the carcasses in a zip lock bag in my freezer until I have time on the weekend to cook them down and make up my soups, stews, etc. I frequently use my large stock pot and cook down several carcasses at once and make up several pots of different soups, stews and filling for pot pies that I can either serve the family over the weekend or freeze so I can pull them out as needed to use for quick family meals during the week.

Almost every weekend I have my large stock pot in use cooking up soups, stews or large pots of beans so I can have them ready to go for family meals during the week. I also use the cooking liquid for making gravies, cooking rice, stuffing, and just about anything else I cook. I am probably one of the most frugal home cooks you have ever seen. I tend to use up everything possible. I even save the liquid from when I cook up corned beef and cabbage to use for soup stock. It makes really wonderful split pea, lentil or bean soups.

I freeze, preserve, or use up virtually everything before it has a chance to spoil and I have become a master at taking leftovers and turning them into entirely different meals, so no one feels like they are eating leftovers. I also have come up with lots of tricks for streching the amount of meat used in each meal, and even the men who are pretty much straight meat and potatoes people have not had reason to complain.

We are eating more comfort foods like macaroni and cheese and other pasta dishes, casseroles, rice and beans, and hearty soups and stews more often than we did previously, but we still have a roast of some kind about once a week or more and I use all the leftovers for other dishes throughout the week, suplementing with the meals I have premade in my freezer.

We also usually have a sandwich night on Friday’s since everyone seems to be heading in different directions and needs to eat at different times that night, and about once a week we have a breakfast for dinner night, since we have diverse schedules and would otherwise not have the opportunity to all share a breakfast style meal together each week.


22 posted on 10/10/2011 1:23:09 PM PDT by Flamenco Lady
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