Every now and then, a rooster must be dispatched from the farm. Often I’ll see ads for free roosters to a good home –not to be eaten, but the likelihood of finding a home that does not involve a freezer or cock-fighting setup is slim. Putting the rooster in the stew pot is a time-honored way of living sustainably on the land, making use of all our resources.
Here are some of my favorite recipes, but you can use any chicken stew recipe. Your rooster will have so much more flavor than a grocery store chicken, organic or not, that you will finally understand why many old-timers (my 96 year old grandmother included) or foreigners complain that our chicken is tasteless.
The first think you have to do is age your rooster after you butcher. If you cook your rooster right away, it will be tough, tough, tough, no matter how long you stew. The meat will be chewier than grocery store chicken which is so flabby you can cut it with a fork, but remember this bird has been running around your yard, chasing off hawks and finding grubs for your hens. To age your bird, let the meat rest in the refrigerator for two to four days. I usually wait two or three days. Aging it in a bring also helps. If you only have 24 hours to age the bird, then definitely age it in a brine, or wine, or buttermilk, depending on your recipe.

Notice how dark yellow the fat is on these roosters which spent their lives running around outdoors, eating grass, bugs and other good stuff.
My favorite recipes include Coq au Vin, Chicken Paprikash, a Corfu dish Pastisatha (my new favorite), Ajiaco (a delicious Columbian-style chicken stew), and good old boiled chicken to use in pot pies, enchiladas, etc.
I’ll add recipes for all my favorites, but here is the Corfu Rooster recipe to start. I originally found this from Gourmet magazine. A reader requested the recipe after vacationing on Corfu. If you use a grocery store hen, the recipe won’t have the outstanding flavor of a rooster, but it will still be good, and you won’t have to cook it nearly as long. I serve this with mashed or roasted potatoes and steam-sautéed greens. – Jen
Corfu Rooster
Serving size depends on the bird
1 rooster, cut into pieces
7 garlic cloves, smashed
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon black pepper
3 tablespoon olive oil or lard
1 tablespoon tomato paste (or use some tomatoes)
2 tablespoons red-wine vinegar (or cider vinegar)
2 medium onions, halved and thinly sliced
3 ½ cups water
½ cup dry white wine (or vermouth or other booze)
1 teaspoon sugar
Pat chicken dry.
Stir together cinnamon, salt, pepper and sprinkle over chicken.
Heat oil in a skillet and brown chicken in two batches on all sides, transfer to a plate
meanwhile, stir tomato paste and vinegar.
Add more oil to skillet if necessary and sauté onions till golden; about 6 minutes.
Stir in tomato mixture and simmer 1 minute. Stir in water, wine sugar and simmer uncovered, ~5 minutes.
Add chicken to pot and simmer, covered, until tender (1-3 hours, depending on how tough your rooster is).
Transfer cook chicken to a platter and boil sauce, uncovered, till reduced to about 2 ½ cups (about 10 minutes). Season with salt!
Tags: rooster, rooster recipes
July 7, 2009 at 6:07 am
Thanks for posting this recipe, Jen.
My sister is often offered young roosters which have been culled – she kills and dresses them and I am sometimes the happy recipient of one – either frozen or fresh.
She has just dropped off the latest offering (2 roosters) along with the livers from the 5 she killed (she doesn’t eat organ meats).
I was wondering whether I could substitue the rooster livers in any recipe calling for chicken livers – do you know? Or is there some ghastly male hormone thingy which is dire to eat? I’ve never cooked with chicken livers before so it will be all new to me!
My husband is very touchy about home killed meat and only ate rooster last time because I casseroled it and cooked it on low for hours until it fell off the bone – AND I called it chicken! I daren’t try him with the livers – so I’m the guinea pig for that…..
thanks for your time,
warm regards,
Amy
July 8, 2009 at 4:32 pm
Hi Amy,
Lucky you to get all those roosters! Liver is such a nutrient-rich food. I’ve never had an issue with rooster livers, though my Roos are never very old. I don’t know if there would be a different intensity of flavor for old rooster livers. Since your DH won’t eat liver, try putting some in with meatloaf or other stewy things. He probably won’t notice it. But a good chicken liver pate might convince him!
Cheers, jen
September 7, 2009 at 4:55 am
This was an excellent dish. Thanks for the recipe!!
September 7, 2009 at 3:42 pm
It’s one of our favorites, Joe. I’m glad it worked out for you. -Tree
September 11, 2009 at 7:14 pm
I just had our first pasture raised chicken and roasted it in a similar manner to conventionally raised chicken, and found it tough. Thanks for the tips on aging and brining. We will give it a try on our next bird!
September 13, 2009 at 6:45 pm
Hi Lisa. Try making stews or chicken pot pie! Thanks for stopping by our blog. -Tree
October 31, 2009 at 4:24 pm
Hi,
The recipe lists 7 garlic cloves in the ingredients. However they don’t feature in the instructions.
At what point are they put in, and how?
Thanks,
Joan
November 1, 2009 at 2:32 am
Hi Joan,
I add the cloves towards the end of sauteeing the onions, maybe a minute before I add liquid. Enjoy!
Jen