How to cut a cooked chicken, including the bones, with a cleaver?

How to cut a cooked chicken, including the bones, with a cleaver? - Black family having dinner together during event

I'm interested to know the proper way to cut a chicken into pieces using a cleaver, without cutting around the bone.

When I go to Chinese restaurants, they often serve chicken neatly cut with a cleaver into pieces including the bone. However, when I search for videos about carving chickens, they all say the same thing:

Cut off the drumstick
Cut up the middle of the breast bone, pull the breast off and slice it into pieces.
Cut off the wing

I'd like to know how to cut it, using a cleaver, with the bones in tact. Thanks everyone, and any advice will be greatly appreciated!



Best Answer

I think what you want to do is this, cribbed from this book, which has an excellent step by step guide with pictures:

  1. Remove the wings. Stand the chicken on its neck, legs point to the ceiling and breasts pointing away from you. slide the cleaver between the body and wing, cutting through the joint close to the body. You should slide the knife between the joint cutting only the tendons, not the bone.

  2. Remove the legs. lie the chicken on its back one leg near you, one leg away from you. slide the knife between the joint near the body, again cutting only tendon not bone and remove the leg.

  3. Separate the thigh from the drumstick, again go for the joint. If you want the legs to be in smaller pieces then you can cut each thigh and drumstick in two with a firm action. You have 2 choices for technique

    • Start with the cleaver tip furthest from you on the board, place the thigh under the blade and push down firmly and quickly. you should cut through the bone.

    • Chop through the bone by lifting the cleaver in the air and bringing down hard and fast. This has better chance of a cleaner cut through the bone, but you need to be a better aim.

  4. Split the carcass in half. Stand in the same position as 1. and with the blade parallel to to your body cut down through the carcass so you have the back and the breast in separate pieces

  5. Remove the breast from the bone by sliding the knife (might want to use a smaller knife here) between the meat and the bone.

  6. Remove the backbone out of the back, kitchen scissors are easiest. you can skip this if the back doesn't have much meat.

  7. Cut the back pieces into nice size pieces across the length.

  8. Slice the breast pieces crosswise into nice size pieces

  9. Reassemble the chicken on the plate with the breast meat on top of the back pieces

this picture doesn't really do it justice, but until I can find a better one... alt text

this video shows it being done with a bit more force and not for presentation, but might be more what you are after




Pictures about "How to cut a cooked chicken, including the bones, with a cleaver?"

How to cut a cooked chicken, including the bones, with a cleaver? - Sliced Cooked Meat on Brown Wooden Chopping Board with a Knife on Picnic Table
How to cut a cooked chicken, including the bones, with a cleaver? - Closeup of whole yummy shrimps with fresh lemon circle and parsley pieces on lettuce leaf on blurred background
How to cut a cooked chicken, including the bones, with a cleaver? - Tasty fish soup in cauldron with smoke outdoors



Can you cut bones with a cleaver?

Butchers use breaking knives or meat cleavers for cutting bone. Meat cleavers are the most common because they are more reliable for cutting through all types of bones as well as thick meat.

How do you cut a whole chicken with a cleaver?

I place the chicken on its back. Then place the cleaver against one side of the breast bone and hit the back of the cleaver with my palm, directing the cut to the center of the backbone. This breaks through the breast completely.




More answers regarding how to cut a cooked chicken, including the bones, with a cleaver?

Answer 2

It's quite possible to cut up a chicken the usual way (wings, drumsticks, thighs, breasts, back) with a cleaver, but a good chef's knife is easier to handle.

What I think of as "chinese style" is to cut up those pieces into smaller pieces using the cleaver to chop through the bones in the process.

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Any Lane, Bulat Khamitov, Erik Mclean, Julia Filirovska