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Learn to wash, trim, and prepare your chicken livers for cooking
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Chicken livers are a cheap but nutritious type of meat. To prevent them from tasting bitter and to make sure they cook properly, it’s important to clean them correctly before you cook them. Soaking the livers in cold water and then removing any connective tissue will give you clean livers that are ready to cook.
How do you clean chicken livers?
- Start by soaking the livers in cold water for about 15 minutes.
- Drain the water and pat the livers dry with a paper towel.
- Use a knife to cut off connective tissue (white or pink stringy bits) from the livers.
- Cook and eat your livers or freeze them for later.
Steps
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Place the livers in cold water. Fill a glass bowl with cold water – not as cold as ice water but colder than room temperature. Place the livers in the cold water. If possible, don’t lay them on top of one another. [1] X Research source
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Let the livers soak. You should leave the livers in the cold water for about fifteen minutes. This gives the water time to coagulate the blood, which will make it easier to remove. [2] X Research sourceAdvertisement
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Drain the bowl. After fifteen minutes, hold the livers in place and dump the water out of the bowl. [3] X Research source
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Pat the livers dry with paper towels. Take one liver out at a time and pat it dry with a paper towel. Make sure you blot both sides of the liver. If you find some of the blood is stubborn, you might have to wet a paper towel and wipe the blood off. [4] X Research source
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Lay out the livers. Lay out all of the livers you’re trimming so that they are flat. This might require that you unfold the livers, as they often come out of the container balled up. [5] X Research source
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Look for connective tissue. Livers have connective tissue running through them, similar to what you might find on a chicken breast. This tissue is usually white or pink and is stringy. [6] X Research source
- You should also look for any greenish parts on the liver, as these will cause the liver to taste bitter. [7] X Research source
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Trim the meat away from the connective tissue. Using a sharp knife or scissors, trim the meat away from the connective tissue. This might take more than one or two passes with the knife, since each liver can have multiple areas with connective tissue. [8] X Research source
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Collect chicken livers from whole chickens. If you are in the habit of buying whole chickens, you'll actually be purchasing livers at the same time. Some chickens have multiple hearts and multiple livers, so you might get more than one per chicken. [9] X Research source
- Don't use livers in giblet gravy - it can give the gravy a bitter taste.
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Buy the livers from a butcher. You can buy whole livers from the butcher or the meat department of your local grocery store. These livers tend to be of a better quality than what you'd get in a whole chicken, since the processing of whole chickens means the livers might be mangled. [10] X Research source
- Livers from the grocery store or butcher may come in a jar, or they might be fresh. Ask your butcher how they package them.
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Clean and freeze the chicken livers. Before you store the chicken livers, you should clean them so that they're ready to be used when you want them. Once you've cleaned them, lay them flat in a freezer storage bag and lay the bag flat in your freezer. [11] X Research source
- Use the livers within three to four months of freezing them.
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Make chopped liver. The most popular way to prepare chicken livers is by making chopped liver. Melt 5 tablespoons (2.5 ounces) of fat (either chicken fat or butter) in a pan, then sauté 2 cups (16 ounces) of sliced onions in the fat. Remove the onions, but pour the fat back in the pan, and sauté 1 pound of chicken livers until they're brown on the outside and no longer pink on the inside. Mix the livers, onions, and 3 hard-boiled eggs together and chop them finely. Season with salt and pepper and either serve within two hours or store in an airtight container in the refrigerator. [12] X Research source
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Community Q&A
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QuestionSometimes I get sleek and shiny chicken livers, but other times some are looking like they're decomposing, resembling cottage cheese. Are these okay to eat?Community AnswerIf these are packaged and you bought them recently, you could check with the employees at the meat counter. If you are really unsure, then do not eat them.
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Tips
- The livers might sometimes come attached to the chicken hearts still. You can remove those by cutting through the connecting tissue.Thanks
- If you also want to cook the hearts, you should remove the fatty tissue from around the heart, cut it open, and remove any blood clots inside of it.Thanks
- A really sharp knife or pair or kitchen scissors are the best tools for cleaning chicken livers.Thanks
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References
- ↑ https://delishably.com/meat-dishes/how-to-cook-chicken-livers
- ↑ https://delishably.com/meat-dishes/how-to-cook-chicken-livers
- ↑ https://delishably.com/meat-dishes/how-to-cook-chicken-livers
- ↑ https://delishably.com/meat-dishes/how-to-cook-chicken-livers
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0Pb39AI2Nw
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0Pb39AI2Nw
- ↑ http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/techniques/cleaning_chicken_livers
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0Pb39AI2Nw
- ↑ http://www.nytimes.com/1989/10/08/nyregion/food-the-saving-grace-of-chicken-livers.html
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Reader Success Stories
- "How to look for the connective tissue and get it out, soak livers in cold water. My only addition is instead of cold water, cold milk, or evaporated milk and water, 15-20 minutes.and it will take out the bitterness that is in them. I do this with calf liver as well. " ..." more
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