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Does it make sense.....?

Created by Agent nods Agent nods  > 9 months ago, 5 Aug 2016
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Agent nods
Agent nods

622 posts

5 Aug 2016 7:18pm
Went to the supermarket....thought I might make a good chicken stock for soups etc.

So there was chicken necks $4.50 kg, good.

But next to them where whole birds, $4.00 kg and I get the "Premium necks" included.

So where did we go wrong?
Underoath
Underoath

QLD

2434 posts

5 Aug 2016 9:28pm
Per Kg mate.
Imax1
Imax1

QLD

4926 posts

5 Aug 2016 9:41pm
Necks make better stock than heart inducing breast
Toph
Toph

WA

1875 posts

5 Aug 2016 11:28pm
Mince was poor mans meat until it became popular. Now it's expensive/ kilo.. Same as chicken thighs.. Cheap until all these reality TV shows banged on about how moist they stayed... Bingo, a few dollars more per kilo..
Mark _australia
Mark _australia

WA

23526 posts

6 Aug 2016 11:49am
They charge more for necks as richies with little dogs buy them for snookum's dinner.
I think frames are better for soups
Battle
Battle

536 posts

11 Aug 2016 3:21am



Aren't you answering your own question here.
theDoctor
theDoctor

NSW

5786 posts

11 Aug 2016 7:47am
Select to expand quote
Mark _australia said...
They charge more for necks as richies with little dogs buy them for snookum's dinner.
I think frames are better for soups


My old pooch is 14yrs
About 10yrs ago
Frames and necks were
40c a kilo
Then they went to 79c/k
Then $2/k
Then nearly $5/k
Where they've stayed for about 10yrs
That price jump happened really quickly
evlPanda
evlPanda

NSW

9207 posts

11 Aug 2016 11:25am
Select to expand quote
Toph said..
Mince was poor mans meat until it became popular. Now it's expensive/ kilo.. Same as chicken thighs.. Cheap until all these reality TV shows banged on about how moist they stayed... Bingo, a few dollars more per kilo..


Dude I've been taking thighs over dry, yucky breast since the 80's at Kentucky Fried Chicken (as it was once known).

...I think they should rename it back to Kentucky Fried Chicken. Health be damned. We all know what it is and KFC sounds like a food additive.

rod_bunny
rod_bunny

WA

1089 posts

11 Aug 2016 9:51am
Since Coles & Woolies insist on "plumping" breasts I don't buy them anymore.

It used to happen in Europe until people started catching on and demanded it stop.
It didn't happen here when I got back in 2007, then I noticed it more & more.

Ever wonder why the breasts are slimy looking and in a pool of water in the tray at the deli counter, when the thighs and legs aren't?

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plumping



I used to use necks as crab bait... but the bait costs more than the crabs these days
bobajob
bobajob

QLD

1535 posts

11 Aug 2016 4:46pm
Ewww, I can just imagine a spotty Coles / Woolies worker plumping those chooks in the back room.
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