The older way: My mother would pull the head off. When she and her younger sister were visiting an aunt the sister wanted to kill the chicken. She hel it by the head and twirled it around a few time, thing to wring it's neck, but when she threw the chicken down it got up and ran off. My mother said she didn't want any chickens she had gone to the troug=ble to catch running, so she used her strong hands to remove the head. I never could do that, or at least I didn't need to, since I could hold the chicken by its legs with my left hand, put its head on a wood block, and cut the head off with an ax in my right hand. Never had one run off.
Scalding and plucking done by hand as described above, except we built up a blazing fire, a few sheets of newspaper would do in the summer, and singed the remaining small feathers off.
Cutting the chicken up is another process which I never did.
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Today's Featured Article - Talk of the Town: How to Remove a Broken Bolt - by Staff. Another neat discussion from the Tractor Talk Discussion Forum. The discussion started out with the following post: "I have an aluminum steering gear housing with a bolt broken off in it. The bolt is about a 3/8" x 1 1/2" bolt. I've already drilled the center of the bolt out with about 7/64" drill bit the entire length of the bolt. Only one end of the bolt is visible. I tried to use an easy out but it wasn't budging and I didn't want t
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