Reduce heat cover tightly and simmer over low heat about 20 minutes or until al liquid is absorbed. In medium skillet, cook and stir onion and celery in 2 talespoons butter or margarine until onion is tender. I pretty much followed the recipe from , and in case you want to view the video of how this was made by AllRecipes click on Video.Thaw hens. I wouldn’t recommend making this for a first date, there was a lot of garlic breath after consuming this meal! Served with garlic green beans and homemade pasta, it turned out to be a delicious dinner. After all, I had just stuffed a lemon wedge and rosemary in its gut, it was the least I could do for the poor bird. To be correct, I should have tied the wings and legs, but my theory is then I would just have to cut them once the bird was cooked, so I let it cook in its natural state. Oiled and garlic tucked in and around, ready for baking. This seems like such an indelicate view of the Cornish Game Hen but wanted to you know I was able to get the lemon and rosemary stuffed inside. Hard to stuff the interior with lemon and rosemary. Empty nesters now, we can splurge on things like this once in a while! And we shared this Cornish Game Hen so made the purchase more economical. Recently we had a store coupon and just had to pick one up. We used to eat Cornish hens more in the early days of our marriage (BC – Before Children) and then had to be more practical – one of these hens did not feed a family of four and the cost was usually 2-3 times more than a regular chicken. I’ll just have to settle for a pasty when I visit next time. Sorry, Cornwallians – I love your little seaside towns, but can’t give you credit for originating these chickens, hens, or whatever they are categorized as. So alas, it has nothing to do with Cornwall, England as I had originally thought. In the early 1950s, Tyson founders began raising Cornish Game Hens and by 1980, the company was the largest domestic grower of the product.” Tyson Foods, Inc., was instrumental in the development of the Cornish Game Hen domestically. “The Cornish Game Hen, often called the “Rock Cornish Game Hen,” was originally bred by Jacques and Alphonsine Murkowski in Connecticut in 1950. The Cornish Game Hen was a result of crossbreeding the short-legged, plump-breasted Cornish chicken with various other chickens, including the White Plymouth Rock variety. Is that clearer now? But wait, Food Reference has this to say, The Rock Cornish game hen or Rock Cornish hen is a cross between the Cornish Game and White Plymouth Rock chicken breeds.” A Cornish hen typically commands a higher price per pound than typically sold chickens, despite a shorter growing span of 28 to 30 days, as opposed to 42 or more for regular chicken. Though the bird is called a “hen”, it can be either male or female. Rather, it is a broiler chicken, the most common strain of commercially raised meat chickens. “In the United States, a Cornish game hen, also sometimes called a Cornish hen, Poussin, Rock Cornish hen, or simply Rock Cornish, is a hybrid chicken sold whole. The United States Department of Agriculture describes the Rock Cornish Game Hen or Cornish Game Hen as “a young immature chicken (less than five weeks of age), weighing not more than two pounds ready-to-cook weight, which was prepared from a Cornish chicken or the progeny of a Cornish chicken crossed with another breed of chicken.”Īnd just to confuse you further, here’s what Wikipedia says: It’s a must try if you are in the Cornwall area!īack to our Cornish Game Hens. I’ve eaten them in Cornwall (in the township of Looe), England and they are very tasty. Interesting story of how the housewives would send these pasties to work with their men can be found on Wikipedia. Most food items originating from that part of England are called “Cornish.” I’m sure you’ve heard of the Cornish pasty (pronounced pah-stee) – little meat and vegetable pies created for the miners to take to work for lunch. Why ARE they called Cornish Game Hens? My first thought is that they originated from Cornwall, England. I want to make sure I’m not fooled by these baby chickens called Cornish Game Hens so I decided to find out the secret behind the name Cornish Game Hen. I was fooled once by the fingerling potatoes that I mistook for small potatoes harvested from the ground before they grew big. It looks like a chicken and tastes like a chicken, but it’s not….
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