• Eldritch
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    525 days ago

    Not only that. That’s the way most people like it. How many people here are equipped at home to brine their own chicken and turkey on any given day? It costs manufacturers more to ship that way as well due to the extra water weight. But chicken can often be dry enough as it is. If you’re grilling, baking for preparing chicken in any way that doesn’t involve cooking it in a sauce or reduction. You absolutely want it brined generally.

    • AnyOldName3
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      1025 days ago

      In a lot of the world, chicken isn’t typically sold like this and people aren’t doing it themselves. If it ends up dry, it’s taken as a sign that it’s overcooked, not that it should have been brined.

      • Eldritch
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        225 days ago

        Oh for sure. It’s a convenience thing through and through.

    • Boomer Humor Doomergod
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      425 days ago

      Brining chicken isn’t terribly hard. Just a ziplock and some salt water with seasoning. (Or leftover pickle juice.)

      The problem is that if you want chicken now you’re gonna need a time machine to go back 12-24 hours to brine the chicken, and people will pay for convenience.

      Brining a turkey requires large and specialized equipment, though.

      • Eldritch
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        125 days ago

        Yep definitely not hard. But absolutely time-consuming.

    • @Bluegrass_Addict@lemmy.ca
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      025 days ago

      How many people here are equipped at home to brine their own chicken and turkey on any given day?

      literally everyone that owns a bucket, salt and has access to water… do you think brining a bird is some fancy thing that requires specialized equipment? soak a bird in salt water… add spices if you want. done…