by wnissen » Tue Dec 18, 2007 5:02 pm
Please don't read unless you've got a stout heart.
This is our periodic stock making time (when the freezer is so full of chicken carcasses that you're having difficulty making room for ice cream, that's an emergency) so I hauled out seven chickens worth of bones this weekend.
In our community we have food scrap recycling, where you can put everything edible (and some not, like bones) in the yard waste can. This greatly cuts down on the amount of trash we throw out, and produces fertilizer for the city. However, this is a problem when using the long-cooked stock ingredients. Within a couple of days, they start to rot. The last time this happened was in the spring, and we got a can full of maggots, with a horrible smell to boot. Since it's winter, I hoped that wouldn't happen this time. Nope.
I covered the rotting bones with a few inches of mud, which helps the smell, but this is really gross. Other than making stock the night before garbage pickup, what should I do? Any one who composts have an idea?
Thanks,
Walt
Walter Nissen