Author: Anna & Mark

Bocking comfrey winner

Ants living inside a comfrey root

Congratulations to Julie Keith, winner of our Bocking 4 comfrey giveaway!  Julie, please email  your mailing address to info@avianaquamiser.com and I’ll send you your starts.



To everyone else — I’m
sorry you didn’t win.  However, there will be more chances! 
I’ll do another comfrey giveaway next year (and will also include the
Bocking 14 variety another reader is sending me to test this
year).  And in the meantime, I have another chicken-feed-related
giveaway coming up in a week or two.  So stay tuned!

(In case you’re curious,
the photo at the top of this post shows a colony of ants I found living
inside a hollow comfrey root when splitting my common comfrey last
month.  Who knew comfrey fed so much life!)

Quartered creamy chicken

Creamy chickenI’m
always looking for recipes that work well with homegrown chickens
(meaning the meat tends to be more flavorful but also slightly tougher),
and this one is a real hit if you like cream sauces.  It’s based
roughly on
this recipe,
which notes that this is a local variant on coq au vin. 
Preparation is remarkably quick and simple, with no advance preparation
needed if you have a fresh chicken on hand.




The ingredients:

  • 1 small chicken (about 1.75 pounds)
  • 1 tablespoon vegetable oil
  • 2 tablespoons butter (divided)
  • 1 cup of chopped Egyptian onions, tops and greens
  • 2 large carrots
  • 3 stems of fresh parsley
  • 0.5 cups white wine (I used cheap cooking wine from the grocery store)
  • 0.5 cups chicken stock (homemade, unsalted)
  • 1 pint of frozen green beans (homegrown French-filet style)
  • 0.5 cups cream
  • 1 teaspoon lemon juice
  • salt, pepper, and parmesan

Brown chickenPreheat the oven to 350.  Then melt one tablespoon of butter with the oil in a covered, cast-iron pot on top of the stove.

Meanwhile, cut your chicken
into five parts — two thighs, two breasts with wings on but no other
bones, and the main carcass.  Sprinkle all sides of the meat with
salt and pepper, then brown them in the pot, turning once and taking
about 10 minutes to sear the outsides.

Remove the chicken from the
pot and replace it with the chopped Egyptian onions and the rest of the
butter, simmering until the onions are fully cooked.  While the
onions cook, chop the carrots into bite-size sections, and then add them
and the meat to the pot.  Top it off with the frozen beans, the
parsley (chopped), the wine, and the chicken stock, then put on the lid
and place the pot in the oven to cook for 30 minutes.

Once the carrots are cooked
through, remove the pot from the oven and place it on the stove without
the lid to boil off excess moisture.  You want there to only be a
quarter-inch or so of liquid in the bottom of the pot for a rich
sauce.  Once that happens, turn off the heat and remove the meat,
then slowly stir in the cream, lemon juice, salt, and pepper. 
Serve a scoop of vegetables, a piece of meat, and a sprinkling of
parmesan cheese on top.

This makes four servings, or
possibly five if you pick enough meat off the carcass to make the extra
person happy.  After you eat, be sure to stew up all the bones to
replace your chicken stock stash.

This is currently my
favorite way to cook homegrown chickens.  Even the pullets who we
accidentally let linger until they were nearly four months old were
delectable in this dish!

Making a chicken isolation coop

Chicken isolation coop

After moving our chickens from tractors to pastures
a few years ago, we started using our remaining chicken tractor as an
isolation coop.  It’s very handy to have a spot like this where you
can put a sick hen so she doesn’t get picked on, or a broody hen so no
one tries to lay in her nest.  And, of course, if you’re raising
broilers, it’s much easier to snag them off their roosts the night
before and put them in a small isolation coop for ease of grabbing the
next morning.  So when we put our tractor back to work, Mark realized he was going to have to build a new isolation coop.



Coop foundation

I won’t give you
measurements for this project since Mark tends to build out of odds and
ends (meaning the cost stays very low).  Hopefully a series of
photos will give you the gist, while also encouraging you to follow his
lead.




Step 1 was to make a
foundation rectangle out of two by fours.  Mark also added a little
perch to one side to let the chickens get up off the ground.



Coop wall supports

Next, he turned the foundation upright to make it easy to attach smaller boards to frame in the sides.


Back wall

Part of a tarp  made a great back wall.


Side wall

And some scrap tin filled
in one side.  Notice how Mark uses scraps of wood on the inside to
ensure the screws have plenty to bite into.



Screened front

Mark wanted to  make
sure the chickens had sufficient fresh air, so he used hardware cloth
on the front.  (The coop is still turned on its side in this
photo.)



Hinges

Next he framed a lid out
of small lumber and used a couple of hinges to make it easy to
open.  (The coop is now sitting back on its base.)



Roof

A piece of scrap tin formed a waterproof roof.


Handle

A couple of handles on
the sides makes it very easy for the two of us to move the coop from
spot to spot.  We plan to store it in the barn when it’s not being
used so the isolation coop will last a very long time.



Isolation coop in use

And here’s the coop in action!  You’ll notice the Avian Aqua Miser Original
in the corner — we still prefer Mark’s first chicken waterer design
for this kind of application since it’s easy to hang and won’t get
bumped when six confused chickens mill about.




I hope this photo tour gives you some ideas to help build your own isolation coop!