Processed Products Made of Chicken Meat: Chicken Sausages Sausages Containing Meat Mixes Including Chicken Meat
Processed Products Made of Chicken Meat: Chicken Sausages Sausages Containing Meat Mixes Including Chicken Meat
Processed Products Made of Chicken Meat: Chicken Sausages Sausages Containing Meat Mixes Including Chicken Meat
CHICKEN MEAT
Chicken sausages
Sausages containing meat mixes including chicken meat
Chicken meat is often used to partly substitute the more expensive red meats in meat
products especially of the raw-cooked type such as luncheon meat, bologna or hotdogs.
In such cases the chicken meat percentage can vary substantially. As a good
manufacturing practice, the percentage of chicken meat should be indicated for consumer
information, as such products are normally perceived as pork or beef products, not
containing chicken meat. Also some liver sausages can contain larger quantities of
chicken meat. These products are commonly labelled as Chicken Liver Sausage,
although in many cases the liver and animal fats derive from pork.
Sausages and other products with 100% chicken meat
Besides the use of chicken meat in mixed red meat products, there are many well
established and popular products which contain chicken meat only. When processed
chicken and turkey meat products were introduced on a broader scale a few decades ago,
traditional red meat recipes where simply modified and red muscle meat was replaced by
poultry meat and pork fat by fat rich chicken skin. For these poultry products such as
chicken frankfurter, chicken bologna etc., non-meat ingredients and the processing
technologies remain basically the same as for the corresponding processed red meat
products. Manufacturers even endeavour to make chicken and turkey sausages similar to
red meat sausages in taste and flavour, but point out the health benefits of poultry
products (low fat, low cholesterol, see table 1 on page 2).
Chicken frankfurter and chicken bologna are finely comminuted products, which can
be considered as raw-cooked products (see page 127). Lean chicken meat provides the
proteins and chicken skin replaces the fat to be finely dispersed in the sausage batter.
Filled in small casings (18-22mm), this typical raw-cooked sausage mix is the basis for
chicken frankfurters (Fig. 232), when filled in larger casings (40-60mm), for chicken
bologna (Fig. 233). The mix also serves as the basis for products where coarse chicken
meat (either diced or ground) is blended with batter and filled in casings of 60-80mm or
cans. These products may be named chicken or turkey ham sausage, chicken or turkey
roll etc. (Fig. 236). Chicken meat balls, a product in high demand in the Asian region,
are also of the same category. They are manufactured based on the method used for
traditional meat balls from red meat (Fig. 237).
Another chicken meat product, which resembles the cooked hams made from pork in
both manufacture and appearance is called chicken ham (raw meat material may come
from all parts of the chicken carcass) or chicken breast (in this case only chicken breast
parts should be used). The meat material is tumbled together with brine containing curing
salt, phosphates and spices, and either pasteurized when filled in casings or moulds (Fig.
234) or sterilized when filled in cans. For canned and sterilized chicken products see Fig.
238 and 239.
frankfurters
The meat selected for the chicken nuggets is mixed with spices, salt and herbs and ground
to the desired particle size (1-5 mm). The ground mixture is spread in a tray to the desired
thickness covered with plastic foil and frozen. After freezing the nuggets are cut out and
breaded (Fig. 248 a-e).
Methods of processing chicken filets (to chicken fingers) and of chicken wings (to spicy
marinated products) are shown in Fig. 249 and 250.