Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Family Pumpkin Carving

Sunday post turkeys Jana and Todd wanted to have the grand kids over for pumpkin carving. They grew a bunch of pumpkins in their garden this year.
Kennedy and Ry were stoked!
 We started out with the dads helping and the moms picture taking
 Ash started making her one. Ry picked it out for her and told her she needed to carve it too.

 To Grandpa Todd pumpkin carving is a serious business. He has all kinds of tools, stencils etc. Jana and I were at Zurchers and found him this pumpkin gutter you hook onto a drill. It was pretty awesome.

 I tried to get a nice family picture of us 3.. I should have know better. Its ok I love them still :)


 punkin guts


 Chris 'helped' Kennedy carve her cat stencil
 Grandpa 'helped' Briggs make his own pumpkin

 Miss K finished her cat.
 She wanted to start on a little one with her initials on it too.
My cute sweet husband who hates holidays and protests pumpkin carving snuck off to the garden and grabbed a pumpkin so he can do his own. He actually really likes carving pumpkins and takes it very seriously but trying to talk him into it is like pulling teeth.
 I went the easy route! I used the mallet and cutters for a bat star pumpkin



Todd made a firefighter one with cookie cutters
We made the neighbor come over and take pictures for us. It was such a fun evening! I love all our finished pumpkins. 

Turkeys

Sunday my mom decided she was ready to kill the 10 turkeys she had been raising. Normally you wait a little longer but these suckers were huge! They were eating 50 lbs of feed every other day. We set up a station at my parents shop.
Chris and my dad went and grabbed two of the turkeys from the pen
 Suckers were huge. Chris had a hen and dad had a tom. We had to put them in buckets with the bottoms cut out this time instead of cones like with the chickens. 
Todd was in charge of the killing. Hes the only one whose done it before like this.
 You cut their throats on the inside and they very quickly bleed out into the buckets. Way less messier than when we were kids and they would just cut the heads off and let them run.
 We also had to buy big garbage cans to boil the water in for dipping them. The other tubs werent big enough. We had the temp at 170 to scald and then into the water for a few seconds.

 From there to the mother plucker. It took a while to be able to figure out the best way to hold them. The thing kept jamming because the birds were so big. This first turkey thats showing the process was 30 lbs.


 You have to hold it up the whole time its spinning so it doesnt damage the skin as bad and you have to keep water on it.

 There are a few feathers left so it goes to the next table to have whats left over plucked. 
 Miss Koree hung out on a chair in the shop to watch
Then it goes to the next table where us girls make sure all the pin feathers are out.
Then we gut it...
and have to take its neck and gullet out

It gets washed out good
and its ready to be weighed
Jana bags it, puts in a timer and then tags it with the weight
Then the bags dropped into hot water where it makes a seal around the bird
and its ready for the freezer
We got creative in our washing ways


 Koree was as happy as could be with a drink and Cheetos

 mom doing cpr on the turkeys back...
 Their necks were so huge and thick we couldnt cut them. We had to get shears.

 Let me play you the song of my people...




We finished in 4 hours! Not everyone's way to spend a Sunday but we were all together and having fun! Plus now there are 10 home grown, organic turkeys in our freezers.
The average hen was about 18-20 lbs and the toms around 30 lbs