Raw Paleo Diet Forums => General Discussion => Topic started by: Victor K on June 13, 2015, 12:24:37 am
Title: High Chicken
Post by: Victor K on June 13, 2015, 12:24:37 am
What is high chicken supposed to taste like? I've been eating small bites of two week old chicken thighs and the taste... It's not good. It taste a little toxic and smells that way too. It's been in a sealed mason jar in the refrigerator with plenty of air. I've been letting it air out every couple days. Also the chicken tastes great raw and fresh. I just expected high chicken to taste more cheesy.
Title: Re: High Chicken
Post by: TylerDurden on June 13, 2015, 12:38:26 am
Chicken is almost always grainfed. Do not eat raw chicken unless you are certain that the chicken are fed on worms and insects to a great extent. I far prefer raw wild mallard duck as their wild nature guarantees an excellent diet.
Title: Re: High Chicken
Post by: RogueFarmer on June 13, 2015, 05:19:05 am
What color was the chicken you started with? White meat is a modern invention. Chicken should be yellow fat (although some breeds are white fatted) and have pretty red colored meat.
Title: Re: High Chicken
Post by: Victor K on June 14, 2015, 04:42:39 am
I can't get fresh wild mallard duck here in Alberta Canada. I understand chicken is not optimal but I don't have other options for white meat. Any specialty meats are frozen besides bison. I'll continue to look around though maybe I'll find something.
The fat is yellow. The meat is more pink than red.
But about the high meat. What does it usually smell like?
Title: Re: High Chicken
Post by: eveheart on June 14, 2015, 04:55:53 am
...I understand chicken is not optimal but I don't have other options for white meat.
I'm wondering why you have a particular need for white meat. All chicken that I have access to has been cornfed, and I have problems with that, so I avoid chicken. My main meat is lamb from a ranch that I have visited often.
In regards to high meat, if you get a batch that doesn't appeal to your taste or smell, it's okay to throw it out and start again. That even happens to me when I ferment cabbage - some batches are not to my liking.
Title: Re: High Chicken
Post by: FRANCIS HOWARD BOND on September 14, 2015, 04:10:00 pm
Agree with Eveheart, if you do not like it throw it away and start again, but might be worth leaving a bit longer as cheesy flavor mellows with time. Never give up too soon, or risk wasting something you have waited some time to enjoy.
Title: Re: High Chicken
Post by: lb_on_the_cb on September 14, 2015, 11:23:43 pm
i heard a podcast about this "high meat" and i cant believe anyone actually eats this stuff. sounds disgusting.
Title: Re: High Chicken
Post by: laterade on September 15, 2015, 12:17:17 am
It's pretty great actually, though you may have to dig deep down within yourself to find the creature who enjoys it.
Took a while for me to truly embrace and chew on a piece of high chicken. It's far better than moldy cheese.
Title: Re: High Chicken
Post by: sabertooth on September 16, 2015, 05:17:18 am
High goose meat was by far my favorite high meat.
Title: Re: High Chicken
Post by: FRANCIS HOWARD BOND on September 16, 2015, 06:08:57 am
That must also be HIGH on fat?
Title: Re: High Chicken
Post by: Victor K on October 26, 2015, 10:11:14 am
Update: The reason the high meat tasted disgusting was because I was using Bernadin Mason Jars which have a metal lid with a coating. The humidity from the meat eats the coating and the lids rust. Even if the lids weren't visibly rusting the batch of high meat I made did not turn out and tasted toxic. I would NOT use mason jars with metal lids to make high meat.
I now use a jar that is 100% glass, lid and all, to make my high meat and it turns out much different.
Title: Re: High Chicken
Post by: FRANCIS HOWARD BOND on October 26, 2015, 06:21:56 pm
Glad you found what was wrong. Rusty meat or high meat does not sound good and is probably unhealthy. Hope you can now enjoy your high meat, high chicken and high fish without nasty taste and possible health hazard.