Chewy meat on poultry (duck) bones

Chewy meat on poultry (duck) bones - Cooked Meat on White Ceramic Plate

Now, I think we have all heard of this method of telling that poultry is done: "When the meat pulls away from the bone easily." How true is this? Might the meat be overcooked in some cases.

Now my specific situation regards duck (both ~5 pounds). We deep fried some ducks for Christmas dinner. The first we checked at 20 minutes, it wasn't done, so we put it in for another 20 minutes. The other just cooked for 35 minutes. They both measured in at ~175 F - 180 F and were allowed to rest. But I was just eating left overs and one of them was sort of rubbery/chewy near the bones and the thigh and leg didn't seperate easily. The other was the opposite but a little dry. I am curious about risk of foodborne illness and whether I should chuck it.



Best Answer

In terms of food safety, temperature is the best and most reliable rule. 165F is good enough for duck, so yours is definitely all safe to eat. No need to pitch it, unless you think the texture is so bad you don't want to eat it.

Pulling away from the bone definitely isn't a perfect food safety test. You'll definitely be able to get poultry to a safe temperature without the meat pulling easily and cleanly off the bones. So yes, if by overcooked you mean cooked beyond the minimum safe temperature, or held at that temperature for a long period of time, that test will cause you to overcook it. (I don't think it goes the other way - it's not going to pull away from the bone if it's under the safe temperature.) But at the same time, you might prefer the texture when it's pulling away from the bone, so it doesn't matter if it's beyond the minimum safe temperature. If you love the results, it's not really overcooking, is it?

But it sounds like yours was perhaps all overcooked by any definition - both chewy and dry are generally signs of overcooking, and you got 10-15F above the minimum safe temperature too.




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What is the texture of duck meat?

Ducks' skin is a lot thicker and fattier than turkey or chicken. For a mouth-watering taste, the secret is to crisp the skin while cooking it. However, if the duck is not prepared correctly, then the fat will create an unpleasant rubbery texture.

Are ducks chewy?

When cooked like a chicken breast, duck meat is dry and chewy, and coated in a half-inch piece of blubber... yuck. When cooked properly, duck breast is juicy, luxurious, topped with crispy skin, and fit to star in fancy restaurants (as it so often does).

Can duck meat be undercooked?

Experts, like folks at the USDA and FDA, say it is not appropriate to cook any poultry to a temperature under 165\xb0F without increasing the risk of foodborne illness and it really isn't ok to eat rare duck breast for the same reason.

What is the best part of duck meat?

If you like turkey thighs, odds are you going to love duck. Perhaps the best part about duck (and, in particular the breast) is the fact that since duck is a type of waterfowl, ducks have a thick layer of fat between the skin and the meat.



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