<![CDATA[Gizmodo: chicken]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: chicken]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/chicken http://gizmodo.com/tag/chicken <![CDATA[The Most Upsetting Video of an Automatic Chicken Plucker You Will See Today]]> This is Janet's Whizbang Chicken Plucker, built using the instructions from the hit bestselling book Anyone Can Build a Tub-Style Mechanical Chicken Plucker. It is absolutely fucking horrifying, and I apologize in advance. [Eat Me Daily via Kottke]

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<![CDATA[MacGyver Chef: Poached Chicken and Couscous in a Coffee Maker]]> For the first recipe in our MacGyver Chef series, I tackled one of the lowliest of kitchen gadgets: The coffee maker. Since it sucks at brewing coffee, I wondered if there was some other use for it...

Gallery haters take note, to skip the slides and jump to a single long post, click here.


Equipment: Just your bog-standard, hotel-issue drip coffee maker. Mine was $25. They're all pretty much the same.

Ingredients:
• Boneless skinless chicken breasts (tenders are smaller and cook faster)
• 1-2 pats butter or margarine
• ~ 1/2 cup couscous
• Water
• Seasonings—I used one of Trader Joe's herb/spice blends

Notes: MacGyver Chef is about doing something with as little gear as possible. So even though I have a full kitchen at my disposal, I limited all prep to the coffee maker and its carafe. I used this guide from WikiHow as a starter, though I veered from the recipe in flavoring the chicken and in my choice of a side. Remember to salt and pepper everything—this dish dangerously toes the line between edible and horribly bland, so season the crap out of it.


Step 1: Measure out about a centimeter of water in the carafe and dump it in the coffee maker's reservoir to heat up. Then stick your chicken and butter in the carafe and douse it with seasoning. Flip the coffeemaker on and hot water will soon flow into the carafe.

Try to get the water to cover less than half the chicken; we're poaching, not boiling, so if the water gets too high, dump the excess out in the sink. Let it cook 15 minutes on this side, stirring once so the butter mixes in with the poaching liquid.


Step 2: Flip your chicken. You'll notice here that the chicken is cooking, but there's no Maillard reaction (that's what Alton-Brown-loving nerds call browning). Coffee makers just don't get hot enough to brown meat. I later tried to pan-fry a cutlet on the burner and it refused to take on any color even then. It's probably just as well, because if the coffeemaker got hot enough to brown meat, it'd burn the crap out of your coffee—and your mouth. Let it cook for another 15 minutes on this side, then remove from the carafe. It's time to prep your side dish.


Step 3: I chose couscous. The original recipe suggested instant mashed potatoes, but it also used the word "flakes" to describe these so-called potatoes, which is creepy enough to be discouraging. I decided to try an entirely different starch. Couscous cooks incredibly fast and all it takes is hot liquid, which coincidentally we already have. Taste your liquid, and if it needs more seasoning, adjust it. I found mine needed extra everything: herbs, salt, pepper and even a little more butter.


Step 4: Dump in couscous in a 1:1 ratio with the liquid. I just eyeballed it, but be careful not to put in more couscous than liquid or it'll end up crunchy. Put the couscous-filled carafe back on the burner and let it sit for about five minutes or until the liquid's all absorbed.


Step 5: Finally, plate it up and serve with wine. I selected a Cabernet Sauvignon from the esteemed Charles Shaw (2008, an excellent year) to pair with the dish. It didn't seem to complement the chicken until I'd drunk three-quarters of the bottle, at which point it became delicious. Such is the subtlety of this particular bottle, I suppose. If you've got more than $2 to spend on wine, a Chardonnay might be the more obvious choice.


Glory shot. If I'd had any, I'd have steamed some asparagus in the basket where the coffee usually goes. (To steam veggies, you just run water through the machine a few times.) I could have then layered it with the chicken and couscous for some color, but one can't be too picky.

The Results: Well, it tasted like poached chicken breast. That's pretty much the most boring way to prepare the most boring cut of any animal I can think of, but the coffee maker did a perfectly fine job of it. The chicken was moist and the texture was about right, and it is an incredibly easy way to make a meal. I could see this recipe being useful if you're stuck in a hotel room somewhere—and just happen to have a raw chicken breast on you.

Tomorrow's MacGyver Chef recipe will be an urban-legend favorite: Fish steamed in the dishwasher. Stay tuned.

Taste Test is our weeklong tribute to the leaps that occur when technology meets cuisine, spanning everything from the historic breakthroughs that made food tastier and safer to the Earl-Grey-friendly replicators we impatiently await in the future.

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<![CDATA[Hackmodo: Use a Chicken's Head as a Camera Stabilizer]]> Don't have an anti-shake camera stabilizer in your camera? Have a chicken handy? Great! Just strap your cam to its head and watch as nature's image stabilization service does all the work. According to the video, motion processors use an inertial measurement unit, which senses motion (rate, type and direction) and compensates for it. Chickens have a pretty advanced version. There you go: easy image stabilization. [Thanks Graham!]

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<![CDATA[Choke-able Chicken is a Bonafide Stress Reliever]]> Looking for a stress ball that's sure to anger the hordes of PETA? Here's one shaped like a chicken that crows in pain when you squeeze, hit or shake it. Let the chicken have it whenever work's got you down and it'll be sure to make you feel all plucky again. This fun little toy even comes in three sizes, priced $13.90 for a large, $9.90 for a medium and $6.90 for a small, so that you can choke different sizes of chicken depending on where you are and how much stress you need to release. [Brando]

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<![CDATA[Brando's Chicken, Pork, Pizza and Watermelon USB Drives Are Phenomenally Delicious]]> It's been a while since Solid Alliance charmed us with their food-shaped USB drives, but Brando's shot back with edible-looking disks of their own. At our count, there's chicken, hot wings, a slab of pork, a pizza slice, a burger, a watermelon slice, a strawberry, cookies and biscuits—all lifelike enough that your kid would accidentally put it in his mouth. Best of all, these hold 4GB worth of junk and cost only $28. Has anyone made a bacon USB drive yet? Huge gallery after the jump.

[Pizza]
[Meat]
[Fruit]
[Cookies]

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<![CDATA[Hands-On Japan's Sega Robot Chicken]]> Lisa brought me back one of Sega's highly coveted robot chicks, modeled physically and behaviorally after a 1-week old chicken. The bird has a light and touch sensor, and responds to petting. When I say respond, it's just different crying sounds, with the occasional wing flap. What's insane is that this thing is like $40. Might be better to hatch an egg and then at least a few months later, you can deep fry Clucky. If you want to hear what it sounds and looks like in action, there's a video after the jump:

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<![CDATA[Video: Sega's Robot Chicken Storms Japan]]> -1.jpegEvery since Kotaku informed me of Sega's next generation robot chicken, I'd been hunting for a vid. (Who said they left the hardware biz?)

The fuzzy wuzzy bots are modeled after a 4 day old chicks, because that's when they're the cutest. And that's before they've turned their peeping noises into early morning crowing, and before they've learned to peck your eyes out. I suppose it's also easier to program the AI for a newborns. The robot, which goes on sale in Japan later this month, is already sold out online (according to a friend who I begged to order one for me). It reacts to petting, doesn't shit, doesn't need to be fed, so some would call it the perfect pet. But it doesn't grow up into something you can deep fry, so I question the point of it all. Sigh. Video after the jump.


Robot Chicken [Kotaku and Reuters]

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<![CDATA[Television Microwave Makes More Sense Than Rock Lobsters]]> By combining two random words, you can either get a semi-successful pop song or an appliance that kind of makes sense. This Holland Electric microwave features a TV on the front, which means you can either entertain yourself or make sure your food's not burning—but not both.

A great idea if you never listened to your mother telling you never to stand in front of the microwave. Plus, they've got the most subtly sadistic product shot we've seen in a while. We're really in the mood for some chicken.

Stand in Front of This Microwave [Treehugger]

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