Air-chilled chicken

Invented in Europe and commonplace in Canada, air chilling has just started to become popular in the United States. From the cook’s point of view air chilled chickens taste far superior to water chilled birds. They also cook faster. The difference is in how the chickens are handled. Traditional methods call for immersing freshly slaughtered birds in a large chlorinated vat of ice water before being frozen. Chickens treated in this manner absorb a lot of water. Not only is this arguably less sanitary but all that water effects the taste.

Air chilling on the other hand works by individually suspending birds from a track that moves through two chambers. In the first chamber cold purified air is run over each bird to quickly reduce its temperature. The second chamber lowers the temperature to the desired 32 F to 34 F degree range. That’s it. The frozen chicken is ready for packaging and shipping. No excess water and no excess exposure to the other birds.

So what’s the big deal? The difference is in the taste. These chickens simply taste better. Better yet these chickens cook faster because they haven’t absorbed all the excess water. The USDA allows the water-immerse chickens to absorb up to 8% of its weight in water. So when you buy a water-immersed bird you are paying chicken prices for water. Buying air-chilled means that you are getting much more of what you pay for. Within the European Union processors are required by law to use the air-chilled process. The only processors that are allowed to use water-immersion are those that exclusively ship out of the region.

Smart Chicken Brand is the only chicken processor that I am aware of the currently offers air-chilled chicken in the United States. Fortunately for you their brand is carried in major supermarkets in all but ten of the fifty states. Hopefully other processors will adopt this technology soon. It has, after all, been around for over thirty-five years.

Click here for tasty chicken recipes

Popular Recipes

Check our most popular recipes of this week

Creamy pumpkin martini with graham cracker rim, set on a beige plate with a pumpkin, cocktail shaker, and bowl of crumbs in the background.

Pumpkintini

10 min • Easy • 2 to 4 servings

Creamy pasta dish garnished with grated cheese and black pepper, served on a plate with garlic and olive oil in the background.

Vegetarian Carbonara

30 min • Easy • 4 servings

Elegant cocktail garnished with lemon slice, fresh lemon wedges, Cointreau bottle, and cocktail shaker in cozy kitchen setting.

Sidecar (traditional)

5 min • Easy • 1 serving

Freshly baked braided challah loaf with sesame seeds, cooling on a baking tray near a stand mixer and baking ingredients.

Challah by hand

50 min • Moderate • 3 to 4 servings

From Our Table to Yours

Explore the Moments That Matter Most

Discover Stories