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Personally I prefer thigh to breast, specially if it's on the bone as I find breast can be too dry sometimes.
Intrigued by this recurring use of "dark meat"; first Axe (I think) and now Gav (via others). I always thought that "dark meat" was the sole perquisite of prissy Americans and/or a hangover from the Victorian era. Do people really use "dark meat" rather than "leg", "thigh" or whatever ?** Phil.
My reference to dark was purely as I couldn't tell if it was drum or thigh, as it was already pulled from the carcass the day before. Otherwise I would refer to dark as being drum, thigh or leg. On the COFIDS spreadsheet commissioned by the FSA, chicken meat is referred to as white or dark. I much prefer the dark meat to white, it has much better flavour, the best bit for me is the oyster.
"Queen Victoria coined the phrases 'light' and 'dark meat' for chicken and other fowl because she thought mentions of the words 'breast' and 'leg' would cause men to be overcome by lust ...".
First, most BIRs are not cooking on 9kW burners.
Quote from: Secret Santa on March 22, 2013, 06:26 PMFirst, most BIRs are not cooking on 9kW burners.Interesting that when I say it, it's ...nonsense, yet when Jerry says the same thing it's, you don't agree.
So what Kw burners are they cooking on then and have you been round every one to check?
It's fairly easy to tell that most aren't all that much more powerful than my domestic 4.5kW and the ones that are are rarely used at full power.