How to Butcher a Chicken, Part 2: Gutting Chickens, Cutting Chickens into Parts
By Joy At Home
This is the second part of a three-part series on butchering chickens.
For Part 1, see Preparing Your Work Space; Scalding and Plucking Chickens
For Part 3, see: Part 3 - Final Cleaning; Packaging Your Chickens
Caution: I skipped nothing in these hubs. All guts and gore are shown as they naturally occur. All that is missing are the smells! (Be thankful.)
Cutting Off the Yellow Feet and Legs
The first step in cutting up or gutting a chicken is to remove the yellow-skinned legs and feet. Find the "break" in the joint between the yellow and white/pink portions of leg, and slice right through. You may have to cut from both the front and back of the joint to do a clean job.
If your knife does not go through fairly easily, reassess where the joint really is, and try again.
Cutting Off the Yellow Feet and Legs
The Neck and Crop
Cutting Off the Tail
Removing the Guts
Cutting Up A Chicken Into Parts - Removing the Thighs and Legs
Cutting Off the Wings
Taking Off the Neck; Separating Breast and Back
Cutting the Breast into Three Portions
Preparing the Giblets (Heart, Liver, and Gizzard)
Besides Stuffing, What are Giblets Good For?
Livers - fishing bait; liver mousse; pates. See recipes for these and more here.
Hearts - Snacks, or side dish (coat with flour and pan-fry in oil)
Gizzards - Snacks (stew until tender)
Feet - While not a giblet, some people enjoy chicken foot soup (a Chinese recipe). See more variations, here (looks tasty, and almost normal), and here (good for a cold), and here (a bit spicy).
I haven't yet found a use for chicken lips.
"Finished" Birds
A Tub of Guts
Butchering and Poultry Resources
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Butchering Helps
- How to Butcher a Chicken, Part 1: Preparing Your Wor...
Butchering a chicken takes commitment. While not a hard process, is it messy, smelly, and can be time consuming. It is best done outdoors, unless you want your house to smell like raw chicken (and... - How to Butcher a Chicken, Part 3 - Final Cleaning Pr...
Courtesy of: http://almostfrugal.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/roast-chicken.jpg This is the third part in this illustrated series. If you missed the first parts, they are available here: Part 1 -... - Butchering chickens (graphic photo documentary) Howling Duck Ranch
A straight-forward treatment of the subject, on lanky roosters. - The Life of a Chick: From Newly Hatched to Adult
Watch a group of 100 Cornish Rock chickens grow from fuzzy yellow balls to noisy adults. Shows all phases of care and feeding on a private farm. - Chicken Talk With Rooster Shamblin
A blog with icredibly varied and useful information on raising and keeping chickens, whether for profit or as pets. Includes posts on how to manage and make good use of chicken wastes, too.
Comments
Jarn, perhaps I'm a bit sadistic. I blame it on growing up on a farm and considering blood and guts a normal part of life. A girl's gotta eat, right? and one can only go so far on salad greens. But mostly, I just want people to know what to expect, and what to look for. Trust me, the first time you put your hand in a chicken and come up with a fistful of whatever, it leaves you wondering, "Huh, what's *this* for? Ooh - that's an interesting little jobber. Do I have one, and does it look like this?" Now you know.
diskasting
It sure can be. :-)
I am now your slave! Thank you for this!!! You have solved a question that has been bothering me about the whole process. I rememeber my mother doing it, but when I phoned her to ask her how to gut a chicken safely, she thought I was insane. She almost 90.
I shall now thank you in kind, with information that you do not appear to have: If you want to chop off a chicken's head, you can get her to keep absolutely still, as follows:
- Take the chicken by the back of the head
- Place the chicken on a block of wood
- Push teh head down, until the beak is on teh wood.
- Drew a straight line from the beak to about 6 inches away
- Let go of teh chicken
You will see taht the chicken will keep looking at the straight chalk line and will not move.
NOW call your brother to come over with teh hachet and just chop off the head. This is not a joke :-)
De Greek,
Wow, that is an interesting trick. I'll have to try that next time I get a chance.
You will notice that I am dyslexic and I always jumble up the and taht .. :-)
And by teh way you must draw teh ine using white chalk!
It works, I have tried it
De Greek,
I am very familiar with dyslexia. My Dad has a pretty noticeable case, my brother had trouble reading or writing at all until after highschool, and I myself show occassional signs of the trouble. So no problem. I give you kudos for putting your work out here at all.
Thanks for the tip about the white chalk.
Not a pleasant job I know. Having been a city girl and until I was a young bride I not even once considered how the chicken went from 'feathers to stew pot'. Until I was given live chickens and expected to create Chicken Paprikas for my in-laws. And not again until I got this brain storm of moving my children to a farm and living off the land in my late twenties did I have to brave the butchering again. It never got any easier but I did eventually get the hang of it. And I must admit that there really is nothing nicer then being able to serve the freshest of fresh chicken to a hungry bunch of hollow legged teenagers.
I sure wish I would have had these easy to follow instructions before.
kindest regards Zsuzsy
Zsuzsy, you make me laugh! I can't imagine what I would have done under your circumstances, being expected to make Chicken Paprikas (which I've never done) starting with live chickens.
I'm so glad you find these instructions palatable.
So how did your living-off-the-land experiment go? Have you written about that already?
I have the hub in the works. It's no secret though that my experience at self containment failed miserably. With the exception of the meat chickens every animal that came to the farm became a pet. From the sheep, goats, rabbits, to the cows etc... I just couldn't send them off to the market. When I gave up on the farm the animals all went to live out their lives in a petting zoo.
What can I say...I love animals
Zsuzsy,
I look forward to your in-the-works hub.
You and my dad would probably get along nicely. He has such trouble getting rid of his animals, and will let the same cow fail to raise a live calf for three to five years before culling her..."maybe she'll do better next year. She used to have really good calves ever year." :-)
Dude. You scalded the chicken too long or too hot. The skin is yellow, cooked, and torn because of the scald. Better luck next time!
Scott,
That happens. This was, unfortunately, one of the few out of nearly 100 chickens which looked that way. :-D But it was the one I happened to get pictures of.

Jarn 2 years ago
Thanks for the warning on this one. I made sure not to be eating chicken when I read it, unlike the last one. *urp!*
Remind me not to tick you off, you're pretty good with a knife. Very involved, great pictures. I don't think I could find a better explanation of the process anywhere else... I'm sensing that you enjoyed showing us all the gritty details quite a bit though? *grins*