Capon
This chicken is called a capon.
The anagram is "capon" (neutered rooster).
It meant the same then as it does now: a castrated rooster. Although capons are not as often seen on supper tables as they used to be, they still can be. In Neil Simon's play The Odd Couple (female version) Florence cooks a capon.
No mating. A neutered rooster (called a capon) grows slightly faster than an unaltered rooster, and caponized roosters don't fight as much.
A rooster is a male chicken , A young rooster is a cockerel. A hen is a female chicken, A young hen is a pullet. A castrated Rooster is a Capon A baby chicken of either gender is a chick.
A capon is a rooster that has been castrated to improve the quality of its flesh for food.
A capon. Capons are roosters who have had their testes removed surgically. This stops the rooster from having the urge to mate and slows him down. Caponized birds eat and sleep more than intact roosters and this allows for more tender meat.
A castrated rooster is called a capon. Capons are often raised for their tender and flavorful meat.
A capon chicken is any male chicken that has been castrated. Whatever the breed is will determine the eventual size of the bird. A caponized bantam rooster will still be small when full grown.
A capon is a rooster that has had his testicles removed surgically. In some area, an estrogen capsule may be inserted under the skin to produce "chemical" castration. Capons are easier to handle with their reduced aggressiveness, the meat is sweeter (less gamey) and more moist and tender. The meat has more fat because the capon is not as active as a rooster.
A capon is a castrated rooster raised for its meat (chicken), capon are now rare as the method used to produce a capon is outdated, most chicken these days is mass produced commercially using different techniques.