Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Chicken tenders (also known as chicken goujons, tendies, chicken strips, chicken fingers, or chicken fillets) [citation needed] are chicken meat prepared from the pectoralis minor muscles of the animal. [1] [2] These strips of white meat are located on either side of the breastbone, under the breast meat (pectoralis major). [3]
The breast is cut from the chicken and sold as a solid cut, while the leftover breast and true rib meat is stripped from the bone through mechanical separation for use in chicken franks, for example. Breast meat is often sliced thinly and marketed as chicken slices, an easy filling for sandwiches. Often, the tenderloin (pectoralis minor) is ...
Chicken fillets, sometimes called inner fillets, are a specific cut of meat from the chicken steaks. There are two fillets in a chicken, and they are each a few centimetres long and about 25 mm (1 in) or less wide. They lie under the main portion of the breast just above the ribcage around the center of the sternum.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Chicken Guy! is the new chicken tender and fries restaurant from Guy Fieri, the spiky-haired host behind most of the shows on the Food Network. Fieri's tenders are wide and flat, resembling ...
Founder Ernst J. Lehmann named the store "The Fair", saying "the store was like a fair, because it offered many different things for sale at a cheap price." [1] Lehmann bought and sold goods on a cash-only basis; he offered odd prices (i. e., prices not in multiples of five cents) to save customers a few pennies on every purchase.
Over the past two-plus decades, Boghosian’s fried creations have become a staple on California’s county fair circuit, including The Big Fresno Fair, which opened Wednesday and runs though Oct. 15.
The oldest state fair is that of The Fredericksburg Agricultural Fair, established in 1738, and is the oldest fair in Virginia and the United States. [1] The first U.S. state fair was the New York, held in 1841 in Syracuse, and has been held annually since. [2] The second state fair was in Detroit, Michigan, which ran from 1849 [3] to 2009. [4] [5]