Chicken offal
Chicken offal: Also as a leading producer and exporter of Iran chicken feet and paws, we are prouldly providing best quality products to our customers around the world in a way that it meets or exceeds their requirements. We export Iran chicken feet and paws to more than 32 countries including China, Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica, South Africa, Peru, Mexico, Philippines and Vietnam.
Grade A Chicken Paws
Specifications Chicken offal:
- Average weight 33 Grams
- Average size 10 -12
- No Yellow Skin
- No Black nail
- No Bad smell
- No blood
- No feathers
- No Black spots
- No black pads
- No Bruise
- Washed & clean
- The moisture content less than 3%
- Frozen temperature blasted minus -40 C
- Storage minus -20 C
- Transport temperature minus -18 C
- Origin : Iran
Grade A Chicken Feet
Specifications Chicken offal:
- Average weight 45 G
- Average size 12 -16
- No Yellow Skin
- No Black nail
- No Bad smell
- No blood
- No feathers
- No Black spots
- No black pads
- No Bruise
- Washed & clean
- The moisture content less than 3%
- Frozen temperature blasted minus -40 C
- Storage minus -20 C
- Transport temperature minus -18 C
- Origin : Iran
Chicken Gizzard
Chicken Heart
Wikipedia
The modern chicken is a descendant of red junglefowl hybrids along with the grey junglefowl first raised thousands of years ago in the northern parts of the Indian subcontinent.
Chicken as a meat has been depicted in Babylonian carvings from around 600 BC. Chicken was one of the most common meats available in the Middle Ages. For thousands of years, a number of different kinds of chicken have been eaten across most of the Eastern hemisphere, including capons, pullets, and hens. It was one of the basic ingredients in blancmange, a stew usually consisting of chicken and fried onions cooked in milk and seasoned with spices and sugar.
In the United States in the 1800s, chicken was more expensive than other meats and it was “sought by the rich because [it is] so costly as to be an uncommon dish.” Chicken consumption in the U.S. increased during World War II due to a shortage of beef and pork.[11] In Europe, consumption of chicken overtook that of beef and veal in 1996, linked to consumer awareness of Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (mad cow disease) Chicken offal