Amish Sets Panel

Amish Sets Panel
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Amish Luxury Bedroom Furniture Set Panel Wood Queen New
Amish Luxury Bedroom Furniture Set Panel Wood Queen New
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Amish Luxury Bedroom Furniture Set Panel Wood Twin New
Amish Luxury Bedroom Furniture Set Panel Wood Twin New
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Amish Luxury Bedroom Furniture Sets Panel Wood Double
Amish Luxury Bedroom Furniture Sets Panel Wood Double
Paypal   US $5,800.00
Amish Luxury Bedroom Furniture Set Panel Wood King New
Amish Luxury Bedroom Furniture Set Panel Wood King New
Paypal   US $6,200.00
Amish Sleigh Panel Bed Bedroom Set Furniture Solid Maple Wood Full Rustic New
Amish Sleigh Panel Bed Bedroom Set Furniture Solid Maple Wood Full Rustic New
Paypal   US $5,299.00
Amish Luxury Bedroom Set 6 PC Panel Sleigh Bed Solid Maple Wood Queen New
Amish Luxury Bedroom Set 6 PC Panel Sleigh Bed Solid Maple Wood Queen New
Paypal   US $5,399.00
Amish King Bedroom 5 Piece Set Solid Wood Panel Bed Rustic Classic Sleigh New
Amish King Bedroom 5 Piece Set Solid Wood Panel Bed Rustic Classic Sleigh New
Paypal   US $5,499.00
Amish Solid Maple Wood Bedroom Set Modern Furniture Panel Bed Espresso New
Amish Solid Maple Wood Bedroom Set Modern Furniture Panel Bed Espresso New
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Shopping for Chicken: Looking for Low Price, High Quality, or Humane Care?

Once upon a time, chicken choices were something like this: a fryer or a roaster, whole or cut up, kosher or not. Today, the market also offers an assortment of specialty chickens. Prices can range from  $1.99 to $10.95  a pound, Chicago Tribune reporter Monica Eng recently discovered.   For a specialty bird, a consumer may pay up to 10 times the cost of a regular chicken, Eng says.

 

Eng researched 5 types of specialty chickens, found out how their feed and treatment differ,  and even had a panel of tasters rate them as to taste and texture.  Here's what she discovered...

 

Amish ($1.99 lb.): The "Amish" label can mean a lot or almost nothing except that the bird was raised on an Amish facility. Some (such as Miller's Poultry) are antibiotic-free and exposed to sunlight.  Flavor ratings vary among different brands.  Eng's panel of tasters gave the Amish bird they tried rating in the middle of the 5.

Air chilled ($2.29 lb.):  After slaughter, these birds are chilled in a cooler rather than being dropped in a pool of cold water.  Consumer Reports found  fewer incidents of bacteria on birds handled this way.  There's also less water weight, but the consumer doesn't pay for that anyway.

 

Organic ($2.29 lb.): To earn the "organic" label, a bird  1) must be fed only certified organic feed or be pastured in certified organic fields; 2) must not be given antibiotics, hormones, or animal by-products; and 3) must have access to the outdoors. ( However, no  minimum time limit has been set, leading one cynical grocery store employee to tell the ShelfLifeAdvice editor, "Maybe it's 15 minutes a day.")  Organic chickens have been found to carry lower levels of salmonella and campylobacter, but they cost, Eng says, three times as much as the ordinary  nonorganic chicken.  Eng's taste panelists rated the organic bird the tastiest of the 5 specialty birds they sampled.

 

Heritage chickens ($6.95-10.95) lb.): The name is appropriate. To be a Heritage chicken,the bird must have good  ancestry and breeding.  It must come from one of the breeds recognized by the American Poultry Association prior to the mid-20th century.  It must mate naturally and  be allowed to live a "long" (16-28 week) outdoor life, as opposed to chickens cooped up indoors and killed at 7 weeks.  It tasted good to the panelists; it was moist but firmer than the other birds.

Pastured chicken ($3.25lb.): Don't confuse a pastured chicken with a free-range chicken.  These two types have quite different lifestyles. Eng explains: "Free-range chickens are raised indoors but ‘given access' to the outdoors." On the other hand, "pastured poultry should be raised  primarily outdoors but provided with access to shelter…"  Pastured birds generally have less fat and more muscle than a factory-farmed bird. Therefore, they need to be cooked more slowly and at a lower temperature. Furthermore, according to the tasters,  the texture was too firm.

 

Suppose you just want a "natural" bird, one that contains no artificial ingredients or added color and one that has been only minimally processed?  Eng says, "Most chickens would pass these requirements."

ShelfLifeAdvice Editor's Note: Don't be freaked out by the references to pathogens in these raw birds.  You're not going to eat raw chicken. If you handle the bird properly and cook it at least to the minimum proper temperatures, the bird should be safe to eat.  (For more on the subject of contaminated chicken, click here: http://shelflifeadvice.com/content/there-any-risk-illness-eating-chicken-dinner

 

Here are the recommended minimum cooking  temperatures for all poultry from the chart on this site: "Safe Temperatures For Cooking Food."

 

Poultry: chicken, turkey, duck,  goose, etc.

 

For  safety, at least 165ºF (71ºC)

 

For good quality (juice and flesh no longer pink)

White meat (breasts, boned or not) 170ºF (77ºC)

Dark meat (leg, thigh) 180ºF (82ºC)

Whole birds, check: inner  thigh, wing, thickest part of breast 180ºF (82ºC)

Stuffing (Be sure to check this!) 165ºF (74ºC)

For more information on  the safe handling of chicken, click here: http://shelflifeadvice.com/meat-and-poultry/poultry/chicken

 

For more information on where to purchase specialty chickens, see the source  listed below.

 

Source(s):

http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2010-07-27/features/sc-food-0723-choice-chickens-20100723_1_amish-chickens-birds-free-range

About the Author

ETHEL TIERSKY, the editor and frequent author for http://shelflifeadvice.com,has been a free-lance writer since 1963 and a food safety fanatic for even longer. She has published dozens of magazine articles and co-authored 14 grammar texts and readers for adults studying the English language. Developing http://shelflifeadvice.com has kept her busy since retiring from her teaching position as associate professor of English at Harry Truman College in Chicago. Some of her other writings for the site include "Don't Let Those Food Expiration Dates Scare You," product write-ups on mayonnaise and water, and "Pyrex Glassware: Is It Safe to Use?"

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