Chicken Feet or Chicken Paws are literally the feet of a chicken that is used as a food source in Asia & the Pacific Isles, South America & Mexico, the Caribbean and Middle Eastern countries. There's no muscle in the feet; only skin and gelatinous material. They can be grilled, breaded and fried, put into stews or soup, or boiled on their own.
The chicken's feet can be complex sometimes having 16 bones that make up phalanx, but overall the chicken's feet are called claws.
No it is not! Chicken feet have claws and small bones in them. The Chinese serve chicken feet as a course for dinner or use chicken feet to make stock for soups, etc. Never feed your dog anything but the meat of the chicken and no bones!
Frogs do not have chicken feet, if anything they have duck feet. Frogs have webbed feet. Frogs have frog feet
a chicken's leg
Luckily chicken pox actually has nothing to do with chickens, it's just a weird name for a virus. You do not grow chicken feet when you have chicken pox.
Yes, they do.
Typically you could do both.
Eating lots of fried chicken will actually make your feet look smaller by comparison to the rest of your body.
Actually no Chicken salt isn't made out of chicken at all!:) funny thing huh?!?!:o)lol
The wing of the chicken allows flight therefore the opposite should be the feet.
Petrifying chicken feet is a geological process that takes many years. if you are talking about drying them, you can pack them in salt. This will pull out the moisture and dry them.
In the days of slavery chicken feed was boiled up as a side to stock parts considered waste such as pigs feet chicken feet snouts and such.